“It’s time for writer’s choice!” I announce, as writers begin buzzing around the room.
Mason carefully attaches pop up flaps to each page of his “Can you find the animals?” book for our open-genre mini study, camouflaging the animals from the reader. Lola scans the word wall, then asks me to add the word “went,” as it’s an important word in her narrative. Later, she teaches the new word to the class. Ryer races to meet Gabe, who is writing in the hallway, and they begin rereading the last page of their Pokemon book before starting the next page. Sienna uses the document camera to share her book with a group of writers at the rug. She asks the group, “Can you help my writing grow?” Lovisa offers Amelia support with editing her book to make it more readable. Violet rehearses each page of her book with Paolo, who listens intently and offers suggestions. Lauri asks his table, “Does anyone know which letter says ahhh?” Avigail, determined to finish her book, gets a pair of headphones to help her concentrate amongst the productive noise.
Writer’s choice is an added component to writing workshop in our classroom, in which writers make a decision to continue independent writing projects, collaborate with a partner, or share writing and receive feedback.
Growing a Joyful Community of Writers Through Voice and Choice in Writing Workshop
A community of writers talks about writing.
Writing is both a social and private practice. Headphones and quiet nooks in the classroom or in the hallway offer students silent spaces to write.
A community of writers support each other.
Making student experts and individual goals visible helps students see that mentors live beyond the books in our library.
Partner writing offers many of the same benefits as shared and interactive writing. Partners plan, oral rehearse, and share the pen -- naturally modeling skills for each other.
There’s no bigger compliment to a writer than when someone asks, “Can I have a copy of that book?”
Lots of guided practice, and visible skills and genre-specific charts are essential to this practice.
Kelsey Corter calls K-313 at PS 59 in Manhattan home. She loves to read, write, and romp in Fort Greene park with her two-legged and four-legged family. You can read more of Kelsey’s posts at http://smallsteps.blog, on Twitter at @kelsey_corter, or on Instagram at @theorganicclassroom
Such a wonderful community you've created for your young writers! I'm sure they will remember this forever.
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