welcome writing all-stars!

25
Welcome Writing All- Stars! Please find an available seat Parents: Check your knowledge of FCAT Writing by completing the Anticipation Guide at your seat! Trinity Oaks FCAT Writing Night January 29, 2013

Upload: ion

Post on 25-Feb-2016

45 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

DESCRIPTION

Welcome Writing All-Stars!. Please find an available seat Parents : Check your knowledge of FCAT Writing by completing the Anticipation Guide at your seat! Trinity Oaks FCAT Writing Night January 29, 2013. 4 th Grade FCAT. Writing : Tuesday, February 25 th (60 minutes) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

Welcome Writing All-Stars!

Please find an available seatParents: Check your knowledge

of FCAT Writing by completing the Anticipation Guide at your seat!

Trinity Oaks FCAT Writing NightJanuary 29, 2013

Page 2: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

4th Grade FCAT

Writing: Tuesday, February 25th (60 minutes)

Reading: Monday, April 14th and Tuesday, April 15th (50% Literature, 50% Informational, 70 min.)

Math: Wednesday, April 16th and Thursday, April 17th (70 min.)

Page 3: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

What is FCAT Writing?Given to all students in grades 4, 8, and 10

since the 1990’sDesigned to measure students’ achievement of

the Florida State Standards in writingBased on writing skills that parents and

teachers expect of good writersWriting pieces are scored on a 6-point scale

(rubric) by two trained scorersThere is no multiple choice section for this test

Page 4: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

Scoring Rubrics

FCAT Writing Rubric Provided by the state of FloridaProficient score is 3.5

“Student-Friendly” rubric Used for student practice

Page 5: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

TOES Results 2013

92% score 3.0 or higher.

78% scored a 3.5 or higher.

Page 6: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

Prompt WritingStudents read a prompt and respond

by writing an essay or story about that topic within 60 minutes.

The State provides either an expository prompt or a narrative prompt

Students must be able to determine whether the prompt requires a narrative or expository writing piece!

Page 7: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

Expository WritingThe purpose is to inform, clarify, explain,

define, or instruct by giving information, explaining why or how, clarifying a process or defining a concept.

Has a clear, central focus developed through facts, examples, anecdotes, etc. Relevant, ample support is key!

Although the facts and definitions are objective, the writing may be lively, engaging, and reflective of the writer’s underlying feelings about the topic.

Page 8: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

Narrative WritingPurpose is to recount a personal or

fictional experience or to tell a story based on a real or imagined event.

A writer may use insight, creativity, drama, suspense, humor, or fantasy.

The details all work together to develop a strong story line that is easy to follow. It should have a sense of completeness- a satisfying story.

Page 9: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

Narrative or Expository?

Find the narrative and expository hands on your table…

For each prompt we’ll see, think about which kind it is, and hold that “hand” in the air!

Page 10: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

Narrative or Expository?

Think about your favorite pizza topping. Explain why this topping is your favorite.

Expository

Page 11: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

Narrative or Expository?

Imagine that for one day you are given the ability to fly. Think about the things you would do and see that day. Now write to tell about your adventures on the day you could fly.

Page 12: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

Narrative or Expository?

Imagine that for one day you are given the ability to fly. Think about the things you would do and see that day. Now write to tell about your adventures on the day you could fly.

Narrative

Page 13: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

Narrative or Expository?

You are reading a book when suddenly you are in the story. Tell a story about what happens after you’re in the book.

Page 14: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

Narrative or Expository?

You are reading a book when suddenly you are in the story. Tell a story about what happens after you’re in the book.

Narrative

Page 15: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

Narrative or Expository?

Everyone has a special place they enjoy. Think about a place that is special to you and what you like about it. Now write to explain what makes this place special and why you chose it.

Page 16: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

Narrative or Expository?

Everyone has a special place they enjoy. Think about a place that is special to you and what you like about it. Now write to explain what makes this place special and why you chose it.

Expository

Page 17: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

What should it look like?

Most high-scoring writing pieces include 5 paragraphs- or are logically organizedStrong introduction with a

“grabber”Middle paragraphs that include

details, support, and elaboration

Strong “takeaway” ending

Page 18: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

Planning is Key!Students should use the entire 60

minutes!5-10 minutes to plan, 40-50 minutes to

write, 5-10 to revise/editExpository plans: topic introduction, main

ideas/reasons, conclusion (storyboard)Narrative plans: Beginning, middle, end

(storyboard)Planning sheets are not scored

Page 19: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

Elements to IncludeGood Word Choice- strong verbs,

precise words, transitionsDescriptive Details- sentences

that create a clear picture in the reader’s mind

Craft Elements- similes, metaphors, hyperbole, personification, dialogue, idioms. These help to capture the reader’s attention and express ideas creatively.

Page 20: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

How can I support writing at home?

• Write and illustrate Sentence Pyramids. This is a good exercise for adding details and expanding a thought.

I saw a clown.I saw a funny clown.

I saw a funny clown juggling.I saw a funny clown juggling bowling pins.

I saw a funny clown juggling bowling pins in a parade.

I saw a funny clown juggling bowling pins in a Christmas parade.

Page 21: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

How can I support writing at home?

Read what your child writes as homework and provide feedback. “I liked where you…” and “Could you add…”

Encourage your child to write short stories or keep a journal about topics they are interested in.

Page 22: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

Review (check your anticipation guide)

1.False (Only grades 4, 8, and 10)2.True (Be ready to look for key

words!)3.False (All writing needs to fit on 2

pages)4.False (Planning sheets are not

scored)

Page 23: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

Review (check your anticipation guide)

5. True (Budgeting time is important!)

6. False (Only a writing portion)7. False (Only lined portion is scored)8. True (Emphasis on conventions)9. True (Stick to the topic!)

Page 24: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

Testing Guidelines

You will receive a parent letter which will detail testing guidelines in regards to:

Testing Rules AcknowledgmentElectronic DevicesLeaving CampusDiscussing Test Content after

Testing

Page 25: Welcome Writing All-Stars!

Don’t Discuss the Prompt!

“After the test, you may not discuss the Writing prompt with anyone. This includes any type of electronic communication, such as texting, emailing, or posting online, for example, on websites like Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram. If you are found sharing information about the Writing prompt, even without the intent to cheat, your test will be invalidated.”