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Roland O'Daniel

Prentice Hall Writing Coach for Texas Writing & Grammar - 1 views

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    Writing coach is a pilot program by Pearson, which is also getting a lot of use in Texas classrooms. With writing being a skill that many students need to hone, the timing couldn't be better for an educational tool like this to emerge. The PHWC is an online curriculum that guides teachers and students through a series of activities and projects designed to bolster writing skills in grades six through 12. It's flexible, personalizable, and will likely inspire many similar programs in the coming years.
david cook

Why Talk Is Important in Classrooms - 0 views

    • Roland O'Daniel
       
      Here is a sticky note
  • One student at a time is talking while the others listen or ignore the class. Second, the teacher is clearly using a lot of academic language, which is great
  • oral language plays in literacy development, defining it as "the ability to express oneself coherently and to communicate freely with others by word of mouth."
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  • the ability to express oneself coherently and to communicate freely with others by word of mouth."
    • martha gajdik
       
      If you dissect the word and use the new word mapping strategy kids would have been able to guess the meaning of this word.
  • . Although Spanish is the most common second language in the United States, students in a given school district might speak more than 100 different languages. These languages differ in their pronunciation patterns, orthographic representations, and histories—and thus in the ease with which students can transfer their prior knowledge about language to English. Proficiency in the home language. Students who speak the same language and are in the same grade may have very different levels of academic language proficiency in their home language depending on such factors as age and prior education. The development of a formal first language facilitates learning in additional languages. Generation. There are recognized differences in language proficiency for students of different generations living in the United States. First and second generations of English language learners differ in significant ways, including the ability to use English at home. Because protracted English language learners born outside the United States attempt to straddle their old world and the new world in which they live, they experience greater difficulty in developing English proficiency. Number of languages spoken. Some students enroll in schools having mastered more than one language already and thus have gained a linguistic flexibility that can aid in learning additional languages. Others have spoken one language at home for years, and their exposure to English is a new learning experience. Motivation. Students differ in their motivation to learn English depending on their migration, immigration, or birthplace. Immigrant families leave their homelands for a variety of reasons—political and economic are perhaps the most common. Many of our students have left loved ones behind, along with a familiar and cherished way of life. Some even hope to return when a war is ended or when the family has enough money to better their life in their home country. These students may not feel a great need to become proficient in a language they don't intend to use for very long. Poverty. Living in poverty and experiencing food insecurity have a profound impact on learning in general and language learning in particular. Simply said, when students' basic needs are met, they are more likely to excel in school. Personality. Some students are naturally outgoing and verbal; others are shy or prefer more independent activities. Some are risk takers who are not afraid to make mistakes; others want their utterances to be perfect. These differences in personality can lead to differences in the rate at which students gain proficiency in listening and speaking or reading and writing.
    • sarah chaney
       
      This chart shoes the levels for the students.
  • It's how we process information and remember.
    • R. Sandberg
       
      Does this apply to both written and oral language?
    • sarah chaney
       
      My thought on this beginning part addresses how limit some students are in expressing their ideas.
  • There are recognized differences in language proficiency for students of different generations living in the United States. First and second generations of English language learners differ in significant ways, including the ability to use English at home
    • martha gajdik
       
      You also have to keep in mind the differences in the changing social culture. The slang of a generation also changes making the transition for anyone with language barriers to keep up.
  • We know that teachers themselves have to use academic discourse if their students are ever going to have a chance to learn. Third, the balance of talk in this classroom is heavily weighted toward the teacher. If we count the number of words used, minus the student names, the teacher used 190 words, whereas the students used 11. This means that 94 percent of the words used in the classroom during this five-minute segment were spoken by the teacher. In addition, if we analyze the types of words used, half of the words spoken by the students were not academic in nature. That's not so great. Students need more time to talk, and this structure of asking them to do so one at a time will not significantly change the balance of talk in the classroom.
    • Ashley Perkins
       
      Would be interesting to track this with ourselves. How many words do I use verses my students? What is the complexity of word choice?
    • R. Sandberg
       
      I found this to be true about my own teaching when I completed the Hallmark regarding the use of the CREDE standards last spring - I had to rethink my own use of dialogue when I "heard" how much of the talk in the room was "teacher talk"...
    • Denise Finley
       
      This could be part of a peer coaching session. It could be something teachers do for each other. I did this when I was in the classroom
  • But think about the self-talk (inner speaking) you use when you complete independent tasks. Some of this self-talk occurs in your mind, whereas some is vocalized. Again, thinking occurs as we use language, and this type of talk is an important aspect to learning.
  • We have all observed that young children listen and speak well before they can read or write
    • Denise Finley
       
      My observations with my grandbaby that has difficulty with speech is that she is becoming more and more interested in reading and writing. She has learned to write her name and her sisters. Penelope isn't an easy name. She now is constantly asking and writing everyones name.
  • Students were expected to memorize facts and be able to recite them. Remember that in most classrooms of the late 1800s, the age range was very diverse. In the same classroom, teachers might have students who were 5 or 6 years old and others who were 15 to 18. Talking by students was not the norm. In fact, students were punished for talking in class, even if the talk was academic!
    • lj harville
       
      practicing to see if i am doing this correct...
  • it seems reasonable to suggest that classrooms should be filled with talk, given that we want them filled with thinking!
    • Karen Muench
       
      This is one of my frustrations - too many teachers still want their classrooms silent. We need to help the teachers understand quiet classrooms don't necessarily mean learning is happening.
  • Our experience suggests that these students will fail to develop academic language and discourse simply because they aren't provided opportunities to use words
    • Jill Griebe
       
      Unfortunately, this is how many of us were taught to be teachers. Why did it take so many years before educators realized that students needed to talk to each other in order to show comprehension?
  • Language permits its users to pay attention to things, persons and events, even when the things and persons are absent and the events are not taking place. Language gives definition to our memories and, by translating experiences into symbols, converts the immediacy of craving or abhorrence, or hatred or love, into fixed principles of feeling and conduct. (
    • Dawn Redman
       
      John McWhorter, a linguist, makes this point to distinguish animals' "speech" from that of humans.
    • sarah chaney
       
      This approaches the idea of how teachers form their questions.
  • children learn that language is power and that they can use words to express their needs, wants, and desires.
  • The problem with applying this developmental approach to English language learners and language learning in the classroom is that our students don't have years to learn to speak before they need to write
  • Vygotsky
    • Dawn Redman
       
      "zone of proximal development" guy
  • English language learners need access to instruction that recognizes the symbiotic relationship among the four domains of language: listening, speaking, reading, and writing
    • Sherri Beshears-McNeely
       
      important info for so many of our teachers
  • We know that opportunities for students to talk in class also take time. So, given the little instructional time we have with them, how can we justify devoting a significant amount of that time to talk? We would argue, How can we not provide that time to talk? Telling students what you want them to know is certainly a faster way of addressing standards. But telling does not necessarily equate to learning. If indeed "reading and writing float on a sea of talk," then the time students spend engaged in academic conversations with their classmates is time well spent in developing not only oracy but precisely the high level of literacy that is our goal.
    • david cook
       
      valuable point...TELLING DOES NOT EQUATE TO LEARNING
  • Classroom talk is frequently limited and is used to check comprehension rather than develop thinking.
    • sarah chaney
       
      We want to develop students' thinking.
  • Questioning is an important tool that teachers have, but students also need opportunities for dialogue if they are to learn
    • Gina Wright
       
      Students need opportunities for academic dialogue in all classrooms
    • Jill Griebe
       
      It seems that with the dialogue examples as well as what I do and see in classrooms is that we need better questioning skills in order to allow the students to show their thinking.
  • Our experience suggests that these students will fail to develop academic language and discourse simply because they aren't provided opportunities to use words.
    • Randy Casey
       
      How can students learn academic language when they aren't provided an opportunity to use the words in an academic setting?
  • , teachers talked for most of the instructional day while students were quiet and completed their assigned tasks.
  • We've divided the opportunities for talk into four major categories. These categories are consistent with a gradual release of responsibility model of instruction, which acknowledges that students must assume increasing responsibility if they are to learn (
  • our brains are wired for language.
    • Dawn Redman
       
      Chomskey's "universal grammar"
  • Teacher Modeling
  • questioning can be used during teacher modeling, but teachers can also activate their students' background knowledge during this time
  • After modeling, students can reflect on what they learned through both writing independently and talking with a partner.
  • Guided Instruction
  • teachers use talk to determine what students know and what they still need to know. This is an opportunity to use questions, prompts, and cues to help students complete tasks.
  • key is for students to talk with one another, in purposeful ways
    • R. Sandberg
       
      The purposeful ways can be the academic dialogue activities that we are sharing with our teachers - PVF, cafe conversations, etc...
  • Collaborative Tasks
  • Talk becomes critical when students discuss tasks or ideas and question one another, negotiate meaning, clarify their own understanding, and make their ideas comprehensible to their partners. It is during collaborative tasks that students must use academic language if they are to focus on the content. Here again, their understanding grows as they talk with their partners to reflect on their learning.
  • Put simply, talk, or oracy, is the foundation of literacy.
    • Catherine Rubin
       
      How does the evolve for children with hearing loss?
  • teachers of high-achieving students spent about 55 percent of the class time talking, compared with 80 percent for teachers of low-achieving students
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    the power of the arts!
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    Amazing breakdown of teacher talk versus student. Something to pay attention to in class observation & in caoching conversations
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    relationship between thinking and speech
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    I have seen an academic dialogue activity of a modified socratic seminar that the teacher sent home questions for the students to be ready to discuss the night before and then the discussion was designed to be completely led by the students the following day. It was a wonderful way to see students engage in reading materials and have their own thoughts
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    I still see this happening in isolated classrooms - in spite of all the training that has been provided...
Roland O'Daniel

Feature Articles: Writing in Mathematics - Common Objections and FAQs - 0 views

  • Though much mathematics instruction focuses on representing ideas with symbols and manipulating those symbols, students still understand mathematics by linking those forms with meaning (Kessler, 1987).
    • Roland O'Daniel
       
      I think this is one area that teachers working in content literacy struggle with. It takes a very different way of looking at mathematics instruction to value this opinion. I think many of the teachers acknowledge it, but few value it enough to invest the time to understand how to do it well. Our task then becomes to find out ways of enabling math teachers to incorporate writing activities that are well supported and successful.
    • martha gajdik
       
      It is true that we need to help math teachers with this, but it is also the realization from the math teachers that this concept is valid.
  • Start small. It takes a long time to grade writing, especially if you have large classes or teach multiple courses. “Start with one class or use a journal for a specific unit” (Brandenburg, 2002).
    • martha gajdik
       
      A routine!
  • What kinds of writing activities should I have my students do?
    • martha gajdik
       
      I really liked the way the article listed these strategies. Considering math is my weakest area of understanding (due to not being able to read and comprehend the material in a fluent manner) these strategies make it easier to offer ideas as a literacy coach to math teachers.
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  • Stephanie Krajicek
    • Roland O'Daniel
       
      NOte at the bottom of the article Stephanie's credentials. She's an English and French teacher by training. She iis writing the article because she is comfortable writing. Who can we get to write this article with us?
Roland O'Daniel

Teaching with Technology in the Middle: Diigo for Digital Writing Reflection - 2 views

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    I love this idea and am unashamedly going to steal it to use. I think it's important to have students reflect on their writing and their work, what better place to do it than on the writing themselves with highlights and sticky notes  using Diigo, BRILLIANT!
Roland O'Daniel

Persuasive Writing Websites - 4 views

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    Persuasive writing websites with lots of examples
Roland O'Daniel

Figment: Write yourself in. - 1 views

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    Site for sharing writing. Become a member of a writing community. 
Roland O'Daniel

º Flash PAINT º Online Painting Tool © - 0 views

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    OK, I'm not an artist but I SEE this as a tool for writing to learn and writing to publish. I think it would allow students to express their understandings in different ways and then be able to share to a wide audience. If you have a pentab computer this would be an awesome tool to use with kids, because it's easier to export than microsoft journal drawings.
Roland O'Daniel

Getting started using groups on Diigo - 23 views

Everything! Roland O'Daniel wrote: > What do you have such a strong opinion about? > > > martha gajdik wrote: > > Me too! Where is a conversation that I can say something about. I have such a ...

write2learn Diigo bookmarking write2pub

Roland O'Daniel

Teaching with Technology in the Middle: Research Writing 101, 2.0! - 1 views

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    I'm not an English teacher, but this approach to writing with middle schools students makes great sense to me! I love the tools he is using with his students. It doesn't do the work for them but lets the students focus on figuring out the important information instead of how to format the paper! 
Roland O'Daniel

blogmodel.htm - 0 views

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    If looking for a system or classroom routine to develop student eportfolio this mosdel is a nice way of organizing the 'tech' aspect of the routine. Have students write blog posts as writing to learn component, get feedback for editing, organize them according theme/topic (allows for cross-referencing), post final products as portfolio pieces. Very transparent, easy to track, allows for built-in feedback/reflection.
Leon Marek

SEO Content Writing India - SEO Content Writer India - 0 views

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    Content writing is an art of writing for websites in an effective manner so that it attracts readers for the website. Content plays a major role in convincing readers to become potential customers. Our Seocontent365 Brainies, this is what we call our content writers, are subject experts in various genres of content ranging from Website Copywriting, Seo Copywriting to Technical Writing and product description writing.
Holly Pope

If You Teach or Write 5-Paragraph Essays--Stop It! | The White Rhino: A Chicago Latino ... - 0 views

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    Ray Salazar's argument for changing our approach to writing essays in light of the Common Core State Standards...very interesting.
Roland O'Daniel

Teaching with Technology in the Middle: Finding new hope for research papers (and a new... - 3 views

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    Read Steve Fulton's approach to researching with his middle school students as they were reading the Hunger Game. I love his approach to incorporating the book, what students already knew, Diigo for sharing, summarizing, and gathering data, and then the writing process. In my opinion, this is how it should be, the focus is on writing not the use of technology. The technology just helps achieve the goal more effectively. 
Roland O'Daniel

Digital Toolbox: Social Bookmarking - National Writing Project - 1 views

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    Great explanation of social bookmarking from a GREAT source, National Writing Project. 
Roland O'Daniel

Education Community Blog: Search Results - 3 views

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    Obviously,I'm not a writing expert, but I love how this post describes the writing process this teacher is using at Duke with her students. The peer editing process is tested and this approach uses a screencast (video that can include audio of what is happening on a computer- mouse movements, ability to highlight text while commenting, etc.) I think it's right up our alley and incorporates free technology.
Roland O'Daniel

Creating a Blogging Scope and Sequence | always learning - 1 views

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    Another nice description of how to think about blogging in the classroom and how to kick up the rigor of the process. I do like the description of different purposes from Will Richardson's book.  Always looking for ways to bring this conversation to the forefront again and again.... One of the highlights of the conversation centered around a section (on p. 32) of Will Richardson's Blogs, Wikis, Podcast and Other Powerful Web Tools for the Classroom that articulates so perfectly the different levels of blogging: Posting assignments (Not blogging) Journaling, i.e. "this is what I did today." (Not blogging) Posting links. (Not blogging) Links with descriptive annotation, i.e., "This site is about…" (Not really blogging either, but getting close depending on the depth of the description). Links with analysis that gets into the meaning of the content being linked. (A simple form of blogging). Reflective, metacognitive writing on practice without links. (Complex writing, but simple blogging, I think. Commenting would probably fall in here somewhere). Links with analysis and synthesis that articulate a deeper understanding or relationship to the content being linked and written with potential audience in mind. (Real blogging). Extended analysis and synthesis over a longer period of time that builds on previous posts, links, and comments. (Complex blogging).
Roland O'Daniel

The Plagiarism Checker - 0 views

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    For content teachers who need help detecting plagarism. It's not a GOTCHA tool, but a tool for students to use to help them understand how to write without plagarism. It brings to their attention that they haven't paraphrased their writings yet.
Roland O'Daniel

Quotes Daddy | Over 1,000,000 Famous Quotes - 0 views

shared by Roland O'Daniel on 24 Jan 09 - Cached
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    Need help developing writing prompts or just like interesting quotes. It won't write the prompts for you but it does help get you thinking.
Jill Griebe

NEA - Turning the Page - 1 views

shared by Jill Griebe on 17 Dec 09 - Cached
  • Getting students engaged in 400-year-old drama is usually a challenge, to put to mildly. But in Seale’s classroom, classic literature gets the Web 2.0 treatment. During Romeo and Juliet, for example, Seale used Ning.com to create a class-only social media group called Verona Lifestyles, where her students, posing as characters in the play, created profiles and posted updates and discussion forums. “Posting in character got them more engaged,” explains Seale, “and gave them confidence to tackle the language. They even took a stab at writing couplets and shared them on Ning
  • “It’s about initiating higher levels of engagement,” says Seale, “and making the learning more self-directed and self-motivated.” “Let’s face it,” she adds, “being literate today means more than reading words on a printed page and writing an essay.”
  • Digital technology, however, still suffers from an image problem. To their more boisterous critics, blogs, video games, wikis, and other social media have stunted the attention span and diluted the concentration of an entire generation. What’s more, Web sites provide not knowledge, but the lesser currency of “information,” broken down into bytes to be skimmed over and hyperlinked.
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • Consequently, say the detractors, young people no longer have the time or inclination for books—not to mention proper grammar, smart writing, or reasoned thought.
  • “Kids have the passion, the technical know-how, and the creativity,” says Hogue, “but they need educators to teach them how to use digital media constructively and responsibly. There’s a huge difference between blogging for a friend or posting an update on Facebook and writing for a prospective employer.”
  • Instead, her students take To Kill a Mockingbird to the blogosphere and discuss the novel with a ninth-grade English class in Illinois, led by a teacher Seale met via Twitter. She also plans to have her students use Flip video cameras to record each other acting out different parts of the novel as they explore character motivation and perspective.
  • The key for students today, says Hogue, is the “authenticity” of the audience—in other words, creating for and sharing with someone other than the teacher. “Students are reaching literally global audiences online,” she explains. “Why would they be motivated to write an essay for only one person, who is only reading it because it is his or her job?”
  • In other words, Johnny can post, friend, update, and tweet, but he still can’t read.
  • a ninth-grade English teacher in Bryant, Arkansas, was confident that her students were enjoying the unit on Romeo and Juliet. But she didn’t realize the extent of their enthusiasm until the day she pulled out an audio CD of actors performing the Shakespearean classic.
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    Literacy in the digital age.
Roland O'Daniel

Ahhhhs and Ahas - 0 views

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    I thought this was a nice description of how and why to use some of the collaborative writing tools in classrooms.
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