Using Student Checklists to Improve Quality in Young Writers

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Written and Created By: Karen Langdon A Writing Workshop Companion Toolkit Who / What Setting Feeling/Five Senses Beginning, Middle, End Who / What Setting SMALL MOMENTS Using Student Checklists to Improve Quality in Young Writers A complete set of student paper with self-checklists, booklet paper, peer checklists, and large group checklists, as well as a guide to how to use these tools to create young writers that reflect, revise, and flourish!

Table of Contents Explanation of teaching with checklists 3 Pacing guide for unit 4 Self-checklist paper with no lines 5 Self-checklist paper with lines 6 Booklet cover with self-checklist 7 Booklet paper with picture box 8 Booklet paper with lines only 9 Peer checklist paper 10 Images to be used to create large checklist poster 11 Licensing acknowledgments 13 Other products available 14

A Guide to Teaching With Checklists In my district we are following the Lucy Calkins Writing Workshop Units K-2. After several years of experimenting with workshop teaching and Lucy s units, I began to develop some concrete structures to help my students improve the craft and quality of their writing in a developmentally appropriate way. This set of paper, and this method, has guided my writing teaching ever since, with impressive results! My students - only five and six years old! - are writing, revising, giving useful and constructive feedback to peers, and using powerful and effective details in their writing. I hope you find them to be as impactful as I have! The pacing guide on the following page will provide you with step by step instructions on how to incorporate the checklists into your teaching. The main concept is that young children need concrete feedback on what to do. The checklist provides them with a visual reminder, every time they write, on what they need to include in their work. It is a self rubric that they use every day - even multiple times a day! This type of teaching begins with an immersion phase, where you and your students spend time together exploring books in the chosen genre. You will encourage them to notice certain features that characterize the genre. When you then introduce the checklist, they are primed to tell you what they think the important features are! This gives them ownership over the genre. Regardless of what your students come up with, you can artfully use their words to co-create a checklist (one which you already have in this packet!) After the checklist becomes a part of the room, and the paper, your job is to guide students to refer to it often. When you conference with students, you should ask them to tell you what parts of the checklist they still need to include. You can help them evaluate their own work. This also gives you an easy suggestion for conferencing, even for very strong writers - you can always turn to the checklist to give them concrete feedback on how to improve their work. Young children often struggle with partner work, and they need to be taught the words to use when talking to peers about their writing. When you use the checklist during a daily share time, you are giving ALL students a job (they should be listening for the components of the checklist while a peer shares their piece), and you are helping them to develop constructive feedback. They can learn to say, I noticed you included the who and what and setting, but I don t know how you are feeling in the piece. Maybe you can add that tomorrow. The advisors learn to listen and read with intent, and the writers learn to revise. Finally, checklists offer an excellent method for extending the time students spend on a piece. Rather than rushing through one line pieces, or finishing every piece with, and it was fun, they now have real concepts of how to write quality work. Once you begin teaching writing with checklists, you will never want to turn back! Enjoy!

Pacing Guide Lesson/Activity Description Immersion: This should take place while you are wrapping up the previous unit (publishing, celebrating, etc. It will take place during your read aloud portion of the day, not writing workshop. Read and expose students to many examples of personal narratives that include small moments. Begin to use the term small moments. Reread one or two texts repeatedly that will be primary mentor texts. Close Study: Explain that the students will now listen to their main mentor text again, this time as writers. Ask them to notice all the small moments in the text. Compile a list as a group of all of the small moments in the text. Demonstrate how the book itself is a big story, but you can zoom in on special parts, or moments. Model zooming in on your favorite moment in the book, and draw/write about that moment. Then have students zoom in on their favorite moments, writing and drawing about them. Compile a class book of your favorite small moments from the mentor text. Checklist Introduction: Explain that small moments are a version of personal narratives, and you will be using a similar checklist. Explain that they will now make their writing better by using sensory language, and ensuring a detailed beginning, middle, and end. Demonstrate using the checklist. Minilessons: Spend the next several weeks teaching minilessons as needed. You will need to teach how to use sensory language, how to write a quality beginning, middle, and end, and how to use the checklist to revise. Include any others lessons as needed. Use the checklist daily during share time. Peer Revision: Have students select a piece that they would like to publish. Then have them work with a partner, using the peer checklist, to revise their work. Publishing: Have students revise their chosen piece, using the feedback from their writing partners. They can then come to you for feedback. (Begin immersion in next unit). Celebration: Share the published pieces with an audience and celebrate! Time One Week 2-3 Days 1 Day 3-4 Weeks 1 Day 3 Days 1 Day

Name Date Who/What Setting Feeling / Five Senses Beginning, Middle, End

Name Date Who/What Setting Feeling / Five Senses Beginning, Middle, End

Written By: Date: Who/What Setting Feeling / Five Senses Beginning, Middle, End Written By: Date: Who/What Setting Feeling / Five Senses Beginning, Middle, End

Author: Peer Advisor: Who/What Setting Feeling/Five Senses Beginning, Middle, End Beginning, Middle, End Feeling/Five Senses Setting Who/What Author: Peer Advisor:

Who/What Setting

Feeling/Five Senses Beginning, Middle, End

Licensing Acknowledgments The images used in this work were either my own photographs, or are acknowledged below. They are free to use via the creative commons for commercial use licensing. Single hand writing on cover page: http://www.flickr.com/photos/40645538@n00/4564378252 Can of pens and pencils: http://www.flickr.com/photos/23995388@n02/3871984162 Two hands writing on table of contents page: http://www.flickr.com/photos/25596604@n04/3427826247 Pencils: http://www.flickr.com/photos/21093323@n02/2376598010 Who/What: http://www.flickr.com/photos/39151020@n03/4319112328 Setting http://www.flickr.com/photos/kevinsaff/3272619731/sizes/m/in/photostream/ Feeling / Five Senses: http://www.flickr.com/photos/33904751@n04/5084847252 Beginning, Middle, End: http://www.flickr.com/photos/73344134@n00/2070268674