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Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

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Page 1: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Reading First Action Seminar

Los Angeles Unified Schools

February 2005

Page 2: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

It’s not the I.Q., but the I WILL that is important in education.

-anonymous

Page 3: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

A Quick Review

• Support networks and collegial groups keep us thinking about improving our work!

• We can’t evaluate what we do not know.• When we hear incorrect information, we

have to be willing to have the discussion!• The road to improved student

achievement is through adult learning.• Fail to plan….Plan to fail!

Page 4: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Objectives and Outcomes:

• Determine how analysis of student of writing can be used to inform teaching decisions.

• Identify how the lesson design of Open Court contributes to the schema necessary for quality writing.

Page 5: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

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are needed to see this picture.

cas·ti·ga·tion n.Criticism or punishment delivered in a severe manner (formal)

Follow-up Conversation: Vocabulary

Page 6: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Follow-up Conversation: Vocabulary

1. What evidence did you see of robust vocabulary instruction and development at your school?

2. How did you use the information provided in the last professional development?

3. What correlations are there between your SOAR data and your responses to the previous questions?

4. Share the data collected, evidence seen, and the actions taken since the last seminar. Colleagues will give constructive feedback.

Page 7: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Unit 2, Grade 3Writing Data Disaggregated by Ethnicity

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

Applications Strategies Conventions

% Students at Benchmark

ALL

AMER INDIAN/ALASKA NATIVE

ASIAN

BLACK

FILIPINO

HISPANIC

PACIFIC ISLANDER

WHITE

Page 8: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Unit 2, Grade 3 Writing Data Disaggregated by EL

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

Applications Strategies Conventions

% Students at Benchmark

ALL EL LEVELS

LEVEL 1

LEVEL 2

LEVEL 3

LEVEL 4

LEVEL 5

EO

UNKNOWN

Page 9: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Insert LD writing data disaggregated by ethnicity.

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Page 10: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Insert LD writing data disaggregated by language proficiency.

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (LZW) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 11: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Examining School Site Writing Data

1. Examine your Grade 3 writing data.2. Discuss with your school team:

What observations can you make?

What are the implications for instruction?

Page 12: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

A Closer Look at Writing Instruction

1. During your classroom observations, what evidence do you have that writing instruction is taking place daily?

2. What is the evidence that teachers understand the connection between the core components of OCR and writing instruction?

Page 13: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

What does it take to write?

• Turn to the graphic organizer (Handout page 8).

• Describe the function and parts of a carburetor.

• You have 3 minutes to begin your prewrite. Go!

What do you need to know to write about this subject?

Page 14: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

The goal of a carburetor is to mix just the right amount of gasoline with air so that the engine runs properly. If there is not enough fuel mixed with the air, the engine “runs lean” and either will not run or potentially damages the engine. If there is too much fuel mixed with the air, the engine “runs rich” and either will not run (it floods), runs smoky, runs poorly (bogs down, stalls easily) or at the very least wastes fuel. The carb is in charge of getting the mixture just right.

Page 15: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

A carburetor is essentially a tube.

There is an adjustable plate across the tube called the throttle plate that controls how much air can flow through the tube.

At some point in the tube there is a narrowing, called the venturi, and in this narrowing a vacuum is created.

Page 16: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

In this narrowing there is a hole, called a jet, that lets the vacuum draw in fuel.

Page 17: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005
Page 18: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

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Please read…The excerpt from Wondrous Words:

Writers and Writing in the Elementary Classroom

By Katie Wood Ray

Please afford others the gift of silence.

Page 19: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Compare and Contrast

Inexperienced writers

Experienced writers

Page 20: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

What adds up to good writing instruction?

Knowledgeof the

Standards

Quality Writing

Instruction+ Writing

ProcessGenre + =( ) ConceptualDevelopment

Page 21: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Tonight’s Objectives:

1. Determine how analysis of student of writing can be used to inform teaching decisions.

2. Identify how the lesson design of Open Court contributes to the schema necessary for quality writing.

Page 22: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

What are the traits of good writing?

In order to better answer this question, think about the following:

• a novel you have enjoyed• the newspaper you read this morning• an email communication shared• a great article you have studied

Then, list traits common to good writing.

Page 23: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Activity #1 1. Read Sample A of student writing,

focusing on content and applications.

2. Identify strengths and weaknesses of the writing.

3. Be prepared to report your findings.

Page 24: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Activity #2

1. Read Sample B of student writing, focusing on content and applications.

2. Identify strengths and weaknesses of the writing.

3. Be prepared to report your findings.

Page 25: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Focusing on content and applications, what is it going to

take for this student and others like

him to become proficient writers?

Page 26: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Tonight’s Objectives:

1. Determine how analysis of student of writing can be used to inform teaching decisions.

2. Identify how the lesson design of Open Court contributes to the schema necessary for quality writing.

Knowledgeof the

Standards

Quality Writing

Instruction+ Writing

ProcessGenre + =( ) ConceptualDevelopment

Page 27: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

What are the OCR ingredients that contribute to the knowledge base

necessary for quality writing?

• Unit Opener– Inquiry Journal– Concept/Question

Board

• Build Background• Preview and Prepare• Phonics/Fluency Word Knowledge

(2002)– Developing Oral

Language

• Selection Vocabulary • Comprehension Skills• Discussing the

Selection• Theme Connections

(small group discussion)– Concept/Question Board

• Exploring the Theme– Inquiry Journal– Concept/Question Board

Page 28: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Taking a Closer Look

How does the City Wildlife unit opener contribute to the schema necessary for

quality writing ?

Page 29: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

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Page 30: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Activity #3

1. Read the schema map for City Wildlife.• Learning Goals• Selection Concepts

2. Highlight conceptual knowledge and vocabulary that would support the student writing.

What key concepts and vocabulary taught in the City Wildlife unit will enhance student writing?

Page 31: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Activity #3, cont.

3. Read the Unit Overview page on the Unit Opener.

Page numbers:

2000 2002

Unit Opener

123K 113K

Page 32: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Think Aloud Model

• Let’s look at the Unit Opener• What knowledge base (schema) do my

students need about ____ to enhance their writing?– What vocabulary do I want to preteach?– What concepts can I illustrate that will

support the theme?– What literature, activities, and realia

will help activate prior knowledge and build background?

Page 33: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Unit Opener: City Wildlife

Realia: bird nest, insects, plants in a pot, pictures (pet vs. wild animals)

Vocabulary: habitat, survive, adapt, pet (domestic), wildlife

Activities: nature walk with observation journal, read aloud

Resources: Wild in the City by Jan Thornhill, When the Pigs Took Over by Arthur Dorros, internet sites, Thinking Maps®

Page 34: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Activity #4What are the OCR ingredients that contribute to the knowledge base

necessary for quality writing?• Divide OCR components equally amongst

colleagues.• Read the lesson.• Determine how each component will contribute

to students’ schema necessary for quality writing.

• Record you answers on a puzzle piece. • Be specific. • Share with your colleagues and build your puzzle

on the chart paper.

Page 35: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Think-Write-Pair-Share

Several OCR components contribute to the schema necessary for quality writing. What discoveries did you make about this statement?

1. Individually, quick-write. (3 minutes)

2. At the cue, find a partner to discuss your responses with, noting similarities and differences. (4 minutes total)

3. You will be invited to share publicly. (3 minutes)

Page 36: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Do these C/Q Boards build schema?

Page 37: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

How does this vocabulary evidence add to students’ schema?

Page 38: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Content Standards and Instructional Practices: Kindergarten - Grade 3

Read the Overview from page 26 and 27 of the Reading/Language Arts Framework for California Public Schools (provided in your participant packet).

“Of particular interest here are ideas, organization, voice, word choice, sentence fluency, and conventions. The first five involve content (rather than spelling and mechanics) and directly address aspects of decontextualized communication that many students find challenging.”

- page 26

Page 39: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Activity #5What evidence of conceptual

knowledge do you find in your students’ writing?

• Look at the samples of student writing you brought with you.

• As you read the work, discuss as a team:What do we notice?What tend to be strengths?What tend to be challenges?Which students look well on their way and which

students need more instruction? What area do we want to focus on first? What are the implications for professional

development?

Page 40: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Writing Objectives

S = Specific

M = Measurable

A = Actionable

R = Realistic

T = Time-bound

Page 41: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Fuzzy Objective

“Our objective is to improve student achievement.”

Page 42: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

S•M•A•R•T Objective

“By June, 90% of our Kindergarten students will be at or above grade level in phonemic awareness (as measured by the Kindergarten End-of-the-Year

assessment) through all of our Kindergarten teachers meeting

regularly to plan phonemic awareness lessons, practice teaching, and gain

feedback from each other.”

Page 43: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Effective Objectives

1. Addresses, or aligns with, the current situation

2. Objective is SMART

3. Reaching objective will have a significant impact on success at your site

Page 44: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Action Plan

Page 45: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

An Opportunity to Share

• Pair up with another school team.

• Share your action plan.

Team A Team B (7 minutes)

Team B Team A (7 minutes)

Page 46: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Reminders!

Page 47: Reading First Action Seminar Los Angeles Unified Schools February 2005

Improving Student Writing

Students must be challenged to do the deep thinking that leads to works like those of Toni Morrison and Isabelle Allende and Kurt Vonnegut and Daisaku Ikeda and Shakespeare and J. K. Rowling, Emerson, Tolstoy, Pushkin.  They were thinkers first.  We’ve got to push thinking as the measure of writing capacity just as we push phonemic awareness, automaticity, and fluency before comprehension. 

-Alta Ray former reporter for LIFE

magazine Expert, Elementary Literacy