8.26.2016

Supporting Writing Through Scaffolds and the Writing Process and Reading Through Teaching Cognitive Academic Language in Grade 2

It was a busy week with assemblies, Back-to-School Night, and meetings but Ms. Mom and I managed to provide our Grade 2 EAL students (and homeroom students in general) with the following learning engagements this week:

On Monday, we jumped right into a Finding Out research/reading/viewing series of lessons in which students learned about how the amount of sleep they need compares to the amount of sleep needed by various animals. Us EAL teachers saw this as an opportunity to practice speaking and using English for the language purpose of "comparing". As such, Mom and I modelled having different amounts of paintbrushes and asked students to compare using the key sentence frames of:

(Name) has more/less (paintbrushes) than (Name).

We then each pretended to sleep and wake up after different amounts of time and transferred this comparison language to:

(Name) gets more/less (sleep) than (Name).

Students practiced saying these model sentences in various formats and we wrote them onto our small instructional whiteboard so that they would be visible throughout the instruction.


We then analysed an information gathering graphic organiser and it's accompanying text together that we would use while viewing a slideshow on iPads about sleep on Kids Health.org. We used this graphic organiser both to teach the terms "table", "columns", and "rows" and as a device to preview the information students would find on the slideshow. We previewed this information by asking students to make predictions as to whether they thought animals got more or less sleep than they themselves did. We discussed how we were going to view a slideshow to see if our predictions were correct.
















On Tuesday, these students then viewed the slideshow and were able to orally discuss the comparisons of sleep amounts in full sentences. Students also began to discuss whose final responsibility it was to get the recommended amount of sleep, 10 - 11 hours, THEIR OWN! They also discussed reasons why it was important to get this amount of sleep.

In another grade 2 class, as an EAL team, we created scaffolds for all students to help them draft a poem about an emotion of their choice in an effort to help them understand these emotions and how they might affect our senses of wellbeing. Together with the homeroom teacher. we modelled use of this scaffold, also taking the opportunity to introduce the concept of the writing process.

Writing Process Flow Chart
We discussed how we had done some prewriting together, coming up with ideas for different emotions, and that now we were going to draft. Students drafted, at times being supported and encouraged to think deeper by the homeroom teacher, Ms. Mom, and myself. Afterwards, students shared with a buddy, and some students volunteered to share their work on the carpet. Tagging on to this, the homeroom teacher and I asked, "As good writers, are we finished with these poems?" Students answered no and we affirmed that tomorrow we were going to learn one way that good writers can revise their work, by getting feedback from peers!


The next morning, as a team, the homeroom teacher and I introduced students to the concept of peer conferencing as a way to gain ideas for revision. One method of peer conferencing that we conceived of, which also ties into teaching students to inquire, involves asking each other questions about our writing. We first asked students to remind us of the question words that would give us the most information. We listed these on the whiteboard for student reference. I then modelled coming up with questions that came to mind when I read the first draft of the homeroom teacher's emotion poem that she had modelled writing yesterday. I wrote these questions down on sticky notes, which I then stuck at the appropriate places in her poem. She in turn modelled adding to her poem, based on information I requested on the stickies.

We then paired students together and asked them to do the same thing! Students loved reading each other's poems and asking questions. In this lesson many students also began the process of revision by adding the requested information.








In later lessons, as a team, we planned to have students revise for sentence variety as well, by asking students to try and think of adjectives related to sight, sound, taste, smell, and touch in favour of sentences discussing how an emotion was "like" an object.

We also plan to help our EAL students and all writers in the class to make connections between the writing cycle and a growth mindset, the idea behind our current unit of inquiry being that "Our choices and mindset affect our personal wellbeing." We want students to understand that good writers believe in growth. They believe that through seeking feedback, revising, and changing what they have written in first drafts they create more satisfying and communicative pieces.


No comments:

Post a Comment

Please leave a comment!