I am hoping these first couple of weeks have gone well with establishing routines and getting your readers and writers up and going! It is so exciting to walk into classrooms and see kids so focused on a book, building up their stamina and glancing in to see pencils furiously moving to get thoughts down on paper. Here are a couple of tips as you start to dig in and get to know your readers and writers during perhaps the most critical part of your workshop time: conferencing with students.
Reading
You are probably in the midst of doing assessments to get a diagnostic view of your students as readers and to check to make sure you can accurately get each of your kids into just right books. The other, very important, part of conferring during this launching unit is your chance to sit down with each of your kids to get to know them. One suggestion to make these conferences be a bit more powerful and purposeful is to think about the following:
- have a list of questions that you want to ask each of your readers when you sit down with them…Like: Is there anything you want me to know about you as a reader? What would you say is best about you as a reader? What do you think you could use some help with? What kinds of books do you like to read?
- if you have access to where they left off level wise at the end of their previous school year or if you have had a chance to assess them and get a current level, take a bin of books at their level, and maybe one level below, with you as you sit down to confer…this way as you are checking in on their just-right book choices if you find they are having some trouble in this area you have a bin of books right with you for them to choose from and they can do a just-right check right in front of you so you can coach them and strengthen this process
- ask them to read a part they liked from the book they are reading and ask them to tell you why it was a good part for them
Writing
You may have done an on-demand assessment where you give your writers one workshop day and tell them to use all they know about good writing to write you a story of something that has happened to them or that they have experienced. Then you can collect this and look them over to see what you notice your writers already doing. This gives you some insight on where you can start with them as writers to help them move forward. You can also consider the following as you observe them and sit down with them as writers:
- you could set up a checklist of “launching behaviors” that you want to look for as you support writers workshop…things like get’s started right away, focuses on one idea, can re-read writing, knows what to do when they think they are done, etc.
- have your own writer’s notebook to take along with you as you sit down with kids so you can show them how you are a writer too and you can have entries in your notebook that match what it is you are asking your students to do (or in k-2 where you normally don’t have a writer’s notebook you could have a writing folder just like theirs and use it in a similar way)
- have some mentor texts ready to go…it could be the ones you are using to teach from or other ones…that you have tabbed for places you can show students to help them keep their writing going or to spark a new story idea
Happy Conferring!




