WHAT?
Because I wanted to encourage the children to use another
type of writing and not a poem, I did some searching for an appropriate text. I
discovered that the School Journals are in fact a wealth of exemplars, which
coincidently happen to be levelled at the correct level. After finding the
correct piece, I proceeded to create the lesson plan using Verity’s template.
My lesson started the same way as usual with the children
sitting in a circle and we glued in the exemplar. The children were able to
make connections with the piece as it had many language features they were
familiar with such as listing sentences, adverbial phrases to introduce the
reader and dialogue to show what the character was doing.
I lead the children to notice the onomatopeia that was used
to complete the paragraph. The children were very animated with this as I think
they had used it before. I shared my own story about playing netball and
getting ready for the game. Using a THINK-PAIR-SHARE, the children shared with
a buddy what sport they play, where they play and who they usually go with. The
start of the exemplar doesn’t give the reader any clues as to what the
character is doing so I unpacked this for the children how we ‘show’ what is
happening.
The children then had to write when their event happens (day
of the week, time of the day), what are they doing, and where they are going to
introduce the reader. The children wrote quickly and shared back with the class
using the sticks to chose randomly. There were some children who were busting
out of their skins to share.
The next lesson, I shared the structure of my piece using
‘Think Alouds’, again making the piece do-able. I asked the children to write
only the listing sentence of what they needed to wear/have/bring. My piece
‘imitated’ the exemplar with my metaphor so I told the children I was imitating
it because it worked for me. As the lesson progressed I could see some of the
children wanted to get going on their own so I let them work independently.
I worked through the first paragraph of my own piece
modelling another listing sentence to finish off the paragraph. The children
were wanting to record their ideas so I wandered round the room assisting
children as they needed it. The children were able to record what they wanted
to say so we called the ‘Helping Circle’ together and a few shared.
The last part of this writing lesson was finishing the last
paragraph using dialogue and an onomatopeia. I was on release for this lesson
so my reliever took this lesson and the children were very successful with
their writing.
SO WHAT?
I like the way the template structures the lesson and helps
me visualise how and what I need to say and do. What worked well with this piece was that the children were
able to make connections with their own lives whether or not it was getting
ready for Saturday sport, a dance performance or even getting ready to go to
scouts. Also by writing only a small part at a time, the children were able to manage
and choose how they extended themselves. Being a piece that was easier to
imitate helped, even for me, I found the structure gave me the scaffolding for
a successful piece of writing.
My reliever was impressed at the sincerity of the writing
and how the children were able to achieve what she had asked of them, even my
more reluctant boys were successful.
NOW WHAT?
After this I was able to share my class’ successs with
Verity as we part of a PD session and she wanted to take photos of their
writing and wanted a copy of the exemplar for her own. That was pretty much a
pat on the back, thumbs up.
How do I top that? What the needs of my children now? I need
to go back to their books and look at what is needed and how can I develop my
own resource bank to continue to make positive change for my learners. I have a
new bundle of resources from Verity, so possibly a place to start.
“The
teacher’s task is to initiate the learning process and then get out of the way.”
― John
Warren