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Kim Yaris

Nathan Bransford - Blog: And The Winner Is........... (and more about my choices) - 1 views

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    Teaching students how to write leads. Here are several good examples from Nathan Bransford's blog contest for winning first paragraphs.
Kim Yaris

A Year of Reading: Poetry Friday -- First Day - 0 views

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    Just some beginning of the year inspiration
Kim Yaris

Carol's Corner: NOT A TYPICAL FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL ENTRY - 2 views

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    Nice blog post about thinking about community building at the beginning of the school year.
Kim Yaris

First Drafts: Gary Soto's 'Talking to Myself' and 'Sunday Without Clouds' - Alex Hoyt -... - 0 views

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    A gem, a gem, a gem, a gem!!!! If you teach/talk to students about revision, this is a must-know about!!!! (not to mention it's beautifully written)
Kim Yaris

Study Shows Gains in Writing by 'Sharing the Pen' in First Grade | NewAmerica.net - 0 views

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    Great article about the benefits of interactive writing. 
Stephanie Griffin

What I Learned about Teaching Writing from Swim Lessons - 0 views

  • As writing teachers, we need to put words on paper. It gives a deeper insight into how to teach writing well.
  • Teach one thing.
  • constantly modeling
  • ...16 more annotations...
  • High fives, thumbs up, and verbal encouragement were as much a part of his time as anything else.
  • Adjust to different personalities.
  • Nate would take one person to the other end of the pool while everyone else was able to practice in the shallow end.
  • Nate smiled a lot.
  • Smiling goes a long way and we should do this more when teaching writing.
  • When kids did something they weren’t suppose to, they paid the consequence. He made his explanations clear and the consequence for crossing a boundary evident up front.
  • Give challenges.
  • Since Nate is a swimmer himself, he is able to constantly push each person to become stronger.
  • Give a small amount of whole group instruction and a lot of time for practice. His instruction with the whole group was a matter of minutes. Then he watched them all attempt the teaching point. Then he would call them together and refine his instruction. He never “instructed” for more than a few minutes at a time. He knows learning happens by doing.
  • Teach the big things first.
  • He made his teaching important by focusing on the things that would make the biggest difference.
  • Ignore the mess. Learning something new can be messy. Nate ignored the mess. Instead he focused on encouragement and teaching one thing. As a writing teacher I need to ignore the mess a little more.
  • End with fun. 
  • Give a reminder at the very end. As they were drying off, he would say to each person, “Now what are you going to think about until you come back?” He would give one reminder. The really big thing he expected of each person.
  • Celebrate BIG from time to time. 
  • At the end of all the lessons, we had a pool party.
Kim Yaris

Interrogating Texts: 6 Reading Habits to Develop in Your First Year at Harvard - Resear... - 0 views

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    Got this from Goudvis and Harvey's Strategies that Work. Harvard puts it out to incoming freshman but I think it's great advice for anyone who reads to learn
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