Week 4 Discussion: Mo’ problems
My project focuses on improving writing scores. Upon the suggestion of my district
coordinator of English (this crazy smart lady), I attended the Heart of Texas
Writing Project and planned to implement these strategies in my class.
So…..I have been attending the training. We are currently on
day 3 of 4, and I couldn’t be more bored.
Here are my foreseeable problem areas:
1.
Including “research”. It’s all very theoretical,
which, as we know, is not practical in real life situations. I guess I am already implementing good
practices in teaching writing in my class, but I went the long way—I just had
to figure it out myself as opposed to doing the research (and I can’t exactly
cite the “Amanda Gripp” way, can I?)
So…while I agree with much of what they are saying, I am already doing
these things in my class.
So what to change/add/delete?
2.
I like their idea of writing in a journal. I have tried this approach in the past though
and it was SOOOO frustrating! The kids wouldn’t buy the stupid notebooks.
And where to store 160 notebooks so they are safe and other people won’t mess
with them? If I let them take them with
them….they will lose them (bc 9th graders lose everything) or they
will forget it and be unprepared for class. Or they will purposely leave it,
and it will be a darn mess.
3.
Also…in this training, the approach is very
“hippie” like –they are like, “Write whatever you want, as long as you are
writing” Well, I get that, but if you
think about it, I have from now until the end of March to teach these kids how
to write two very different types of essays.
7 months. Out of those 7 months,
if you split them in half, you really only have 3.5 months for each essay.
Since we are on block schedules, we only see the kids every other day. So,
split it in half again. That’s like 2
months. So then, take out testing dates, days off, etc, I have about a month
(maybe a little more) of instruction time. This is not enough to lead a hippie
writing workshop, letting everyone explore their feelings and whatnot. It NEEDS to be more structured.
4.
When I argued the above point, the leader of the
training argued that her way works and that I should just trust it and that all
the research backs up that it works.
Ummmmmm……
5.
I would TRUST in her system if my own system
wasn’t already proven to be successful.
6.
AND FINALLY…..I am soooooo bored with this. The entire training is based around us having
time to “write in our journals” so we can feel what our students are
feeling—which is an excellent approach.
What I am feeling is: this approach is lame, I don’t like it, and I am
bored. I would never do this with my
kids because I will be bored grading their boring writing and I will be bored
teaching it.
Something needs to change.
To summarize, my problems basically are that I don’t believe in this
particular approach, don’t know what I need to do to improve it, and I think
it’s sort of boring. Can we use our own
approach, and then just find research to back it up?
Hippie writing? HILARIOUS!!!
ReplyDeleteI agree completely with you regarding the needed structure (esp)for younger writers. It is quite unfortunate about the writing journals, but I think that is a worldwide problem. Every teacher I know is complaining of the same thing regarding those journals. Here is a suggestion that may work (somewhat):
Perhaps you make daily journal writing an elecronic activity. I am seeing that many districts are transitioning to BYOT or BYOD (bring your own device / bring your own technology). Seeing others using their devices might create enough of the pproper kind of peer pressure we need to get it done. And no, everyone can not afford their own technology. Perhaps your school district or corporate partners / sponsors will underwrite the purchase of techonology for those who are unable to provide their own.
Good luck to you!!!
Molly....it's funny that you say that because that was my exact thought. The district just bought the English dept our own set of tablets. I am guessing they are like iPads or something and have thought maybe about blogging. Do you have any suggestions of site where I can go and somehow corral 150+ students altogether so I don't spend hours trying to track them down? I wonder if this would even work---like if I created a blog and then they commented on it? What do you think? The only problem is this: 1. we don't get the tablets exclusively all the time, and 2. my district/school is super against using anything (like a cell) other than a computer or these tablets. So, if an administrator walked in, and they had their cell phones out, I would get in trouble. But I value this input because I was kind of thinking the same thing. If you think it would work, that gives me encouragement. :)
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