literacy across the curriculum 2 developing consistent writing skills

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Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

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Page 1: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the Curriculum2Developing Consistent

Writing Skills

Page 2: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the Curriculum21. In most areas students are heavily assessed

through their ability to write

2. Writing has been a neglected area of teaching - in ALL subjects

Why is a consistent approach to writing so important?

Page 3: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the Curriculum2• What progress have you made on “writing”

so far in your own school?

Page 4: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the Curriculum2Improving writing: Seven Suggestions

1: Keep it simple: just go for the writing essentials in each

subject area, one by one if necessary

2: Avoid technical terms as much as possible

3: Emphasise demonstration and modelling more than scaffolding

4: Develop a ‘House style’ on teaching writing

5: Get it bedded into the team itself, rather than being driven by you

6: Emphasise motivation and

outcomes

7: Evaluate impact … and report it

Page 5: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the Curriculum2

Deeveloping a ‘House’ Style

Page 6: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the Curriculum2 HOUSE STYLE

1 Before pupils start to write, get them thinking about the purpose and audience.

• What is this text for? • What is it designed to

achieve? • Who is it aimed at?

Page 7: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the Curriculum2 HOUSE STYLE

2 Define the conventions of the writing:• How should it be organised (chronologically? non-

chronologically?)• Present or past tense?• Active (“We added some potassium”) or passive

(“some potassium was added”)?• What types of sentences (short? long? bullet-

points? statements? questions? commands?)• How are connectives used to link ideas: temporal

(later, now, next) or causal (because, so, despite this, on the other hand)

• Any stock words or phrases (“Dear sir .. yours faithfully”)

• Any technical terms?

Page 8: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the Curriculum2 HOUSE STYLE

3 Demonstrate the writing process – pupils need to see you write a sample of the text

Page 9: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the Curriculum2 HOUSE STYLE

5 Use scaffolding to support them:• Key words on wall• Diagrams of the structure of this text

type• A glossary in their books• Writing frames to teach layout,

structure and style

Page 10: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the Curriculum2 HOUSE STYLE

Remember:• You won’t get better writing from students

if you aren’t explicit about what you expect

• You need to embed these techniques into your practice. Don’t try them for one lesson and then dismiss them. They do work. Guaranteed.

Page 11: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the Curriculum2 HOUSE STYLE

So how explicit do subject teachers need to be about writing conventions?

… and do they need to USE these terms?

•Connectives?

•Word classes?

•Modification?

•Clauses?

•Passive voice?

•Tenses?

•Topic sentences?

•Declaratives?

•Noun phrases?

Do they need to know about …

Talking point! 4-2-8

Page 12: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the Curriculum2 HOUSE STYLE

Your challenge:

Convince the teaching team - ie what’s in it for them?

Develop their awareness of the writing conventions

Help them learn how to teach the writing skills effectively

Evaluate the impact

Page 13: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the Curriculum2•Keep it simple: “less is more”

•Show how it will improve their lives

•Use Dept meetings to embed the thinking before unleashing it

•Think of practical activities to internalise the thinking

•Keep it light, upbeat, fun

•Aim for small-scale successes

H I N T S

Page 14: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the Curriculum2 HOUSE STYLE

Familiarising staff (teachers and teaching assistants) with text-type conventions …

… first: focus on the essentials …

Page 15: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the CurriculumEvaluation, including self-evaluation1 Purpose: to record the strengths/weaknesses of a performance/product2 Structure (Text level)•Opening statement contains value judgement in answer to a question e.g. How well did your construction work?•Can be written in list form with bullet points, numbers or letters•Subheadings may be used to focus attention of writer•Paragraphs should contain statement of strengths or weaknesses with evidence to support statements•Summary will sum up strengths and weaknesses and may be followed by targets for future

3 Language features (Word and Sentence level)•Written in first person (I or we)•Written in past tense to reflect on performance; present to reflect on personal/group characteristics; future for target setting•Connectives relate to comparison/contrast e.g. although, however, still, on the other hand or cause and effect e.g. because, since, therefore, as a result•Phrases used for commentary e.g. we felt that, it seemed as if, we might have, I thought that..

2 HOUSE STYLE

Page 16: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the Curriculum2So how will you get these conventions

embedded in Departmental thinking …?

THINK TANK

Page 17: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the Curriculum2Barton’s suggestions:

•It has to be done actively

•It has to involve teachers themselves writing, not just analysing existing texts

•Try writing ‘bad’models

Page 18: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the Curriculum2The process …

The product …

Page 19: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the Curriculum2“How pleased are you with your finished product?”

First, write the opening paragraph of a bad example.

Then we’ll write a better one.

Then we’ll demonstrate shared composition.

Page 20: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the CurriculumEvaluation, including self-evaluation1 Purpose: to record the strengths/weaknesses of a performance/product2 Structure (Text level)•Opening statement contains value judgement in answer to a question e.g. How well did your construction work?•Can be written in list form with bullet points, numbers or letters•Subheadings may be used to focus attention of writer•Paragraphs should contain statement of strengths or weaknesses with evidence to support statements•Summary will sum up strengths and weaknesses and may be followed by targets for future

3 Language features (Word and Sentence level)•Written in first person (I or we)•Written in past tense to reflect on performance; present to reflect on personal/group characteristics; future for target setting•Connectives relate to comparison/contrast e.g. although, however, still, on the other hand or cause and effect e.g. because, since, therefore, as a result•Phrases used for commentary e.g. we felt that, it seemed as if, we might have, I thought that..

2 HOUSE STYLE

Page 21: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the Curriculum2Hints for achieving better teaching of writing at your school:

Focus on impact - what do you need to do which will have the desired effect? That’s more important than HOW you get there

Find ways of getting it bedded into the teams: your role as coordinator is not to teach writing better; it’s their responsibility

Use light, active inset sessions (eg dept meetings) in which they do some writing and think how to teach it better … with guidance

Don’t spend much time getting people to analyse models - it’s not always a transferable skillUse a student survey to give

evidence of what works best in teaching writing

Keep the writing theme in the public eye through staff newsletters, displays, hints and tips. Keep it light and positive

Providing annotated models of text types on the wall is a good end product for student reference … but teacher demonstration is much more important

Don’t assume that any of this will be quick or easy to achieve … but work with your Head to give it high priority with all staff

And remember: “Less is more”. If you can get 10% of your staff teaching writing well by next July, that will have a huge impact. Be realistic. Go for small-scale gains

Page 22: Literacy Across the Curriculum 2 Developing Consistent Writing Skills

Literacy Across the Curriculum2Developing Consistent

Writing Skills