Welcome Back!
I hope you all had a wonderful first week of school. It was great seeing all the eager faces around school and it was so nice getting to see those same eager faces get even more excited as they launched into their reading and writing year with their new teachers!! I am sure your week was filled with tons of routines and getting to know you activities and I hope it went well. I thought I would send out a post on some predictable structures and routines that you will want to make sure you cover in both reading and writing if you haven’t done so already! I also wanted to talk a little bit about starting your conferring off with a BANG in both reading and writing and introduce you to a tool that I was reminded of at my district’s homegrown institute this past August. It might be a tool you will want to get started with in reading and writing at the beginning of your year!
Predictable Routines and Structures
1. How Workshop Will Go Each and Every Day (including the teacher’s job and the student’s job during each part of workshop but for sure focusing on what are the roles during a mini-lesson…see below for a sticky note I wrote during our district’s homegrown institute that might help with this)
2. Turning and Talking (who do I talk to, what do we talk about, what do I do when I think I am done talking…)
3. Getting Ready for Workshop (getting out supplies, getting desk or table spot ready, coming to the meeting area quickly and quietly and ready to learn!)
4. Volume of Reading and Writing (ways to build our stamina, what to do when I lose steam, strategies to keep myself focused)
5. Partner Work
Conferring With a BANG!
Compliment Conferences: Some teachers like to spend the first couple of weeks holding compliment conferences as a way to get to know their readers and writers. Compliments conferences involve the teacher in observing their students during workshop time and noticing what their readers and writers are already doing (or leaning towards doing) well as workshop students. The teacher can then sit down next to a reader or writer and spend just a few minutes giving student a specific compliment in a effort to keep those behaviors going, spark a positive reading and writing attitude, and perhaps use the behaviors as a model to the other students. A compliment could sound like: “Harry, I noticed today that when I said off you go you got your reading bin, found your just right reading spot, filled out your reading log and started reading right away. This is such an important part of taking charge of your reading life and making the most of your reading workshop time. Keep it up!” Notice Harry not only knows what reading behavior he should keep doing but he also knows why it is important for him as a reader. Similarly in writing, a compliment could sound like: “Susie, I am noticing in your notebook that you have made a list of some people and some places that are important to you AND you have listed out some small moments stories to go along with those people and places. These are such important strategies for generating ideas for your writing. You will now be able to choose a story to write that is focused on one time and one that has a lot of meaning for you. Way to go!”
Keeping Track of our Goals
At my district’s homegrown institute this past summer I was reminded of a wonderful tool that can be used to help students and teachers keep track of and be accountable for goals in the reading and writing workshop. You can call it an Accomplishment Board or an I Did It! chart or whatever you would like! The important part is the use of it and what it can offer teachers and students in regards to goal setting and goal accomplishments. A lot of times during a reading or writing conference, I like to leave the student with an artifact that represents what we worked on and can be used to remind the reader and writer of what they are working usually as a result of our conference or small group. The artifact may be a sticky note, a smaller version of an anchor chart, a to-do checklist…any type of reminder. Here are a few artifact examples:
In a subsequent conference or small-group, once the student works on the goal and that becomes a habit and a part of their reading and writing repertoire of strategies, they can take the artifact or write down on a sticky note or notecard what they can now do as a reader or writer and then can place this in their pocket on the Accomplishment Board or the I Did It! chart. Here is an example of a possible chart…each student has a pocket (coin envelope with top cut off) and there is a notecard in each envelope waiting for their accomplishments! You can then label the pockets with student names or numbers or have the students do a label for themselves!





