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2009-08-13 00:38:00 
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summary :I went to a great closing session today about Writing Informational Books with Third Graders and took TONS of notes. It is billed as a third grade unit but in Ohio essays aren’t introduced unti ...

I went to a great closing session today about Writing Informational Books with Third Graders and took TONS of notes. It is billed as a third grade unit but in Ohio essays aren’t introduced until fifth grade so I was thinking for some schools (mine included) this could be a good expository unit for fourth graders.

a unit of study to be done in November of third grade rather than the essay unit for fourth and fifth grade. A type of expository writing that prepares them for that future work.unit will be 3-4 weeks longstart reading informational books aloud several weeks before starting the unit

Goals to keep in mind:

1. volume-a page a day-not just a few words but full sentences. Remember where they were in 2nd grade with their All About Books

These will be topics that they are mini-experts in (example-skateboarding baby sisters etc.). Research will be light. They will know about their topic and have personal experience with it.

There will be chapters with full pages

2. revision-when we do revision it’s large scale revision-how do I add on a lot more information or how do I change how this chapter looks

3. structure-What is the structure and how will I organize the chapters?

example-if their topic is giraffes and a chapter is about the food they eat will it be organized by what they eat morning noon and night or will it be a compare/contrast-how what giraffes eat is similar to a horse diet; how it is different from a horse diet.

clear topic with examples-example-is your sock draw a jumbled mess or is it organized so other people would be able to find something in it

4. Writing to Teach-not just writers but teachers-write with a teaching voice

try to anticipate readers’ questions

have text features in non-fiction that they can use (visual aids)

There are 2 options for how this unit can go:

1. Multiple Informational books (on multiple topics) kept in a writing folder-if your students stamina and volume is low they might benefit from writing one then going on to another. Then when there are mini-lessons they can try out the strategies on any of those “finished” books

2. Write 1 books for the whole unit-do more work around revision and see different ideas they can draw out

1 page= 1 chapter

Possible Layout for Informational Book Study

Launch

Rally students to the big work of the whole unit “You are already writers now you will become teachers!”

Collect (this will be a couple days) Try different topics on for size

writers ask “What do I think people are dying to know?” -think of things you are good at -think of a person place or  thing and information you know about those things (ex-making bed getting backpack ready fighting with sibling soccer practicing the piano walking the dog taking out the trash)-think about things you care about (ex-people recycling)-reread your true stories to get ideas of things they know a lot about (friends-fighting/apologizing how to make one types of friends what do you do in a fight with a friend-talk to family and friends to tell you what you are good atWe make categories of informational and chapters that go with topics-make lists webs or other graphic organizers to think through topics-in partnerships or small groups rehearse chapters by taking on a posture of a teacher teaching a course.angle topics towards ideas (this allows for differentiating/making more challenging)

example-dog:

feedinggroomingparts of a dog

versus more idea based:

Dogs are Man’s Best Friend-

Dogs help you (example-dogs help policemen firemen shepherds)Dogs protect you (example-dogs protect the house people etc.)Dogs play with you (example-dogs chase you play tricks etc.)

Gather Information

grow ideas about this topic in notebook and then teachdecide how you want your informational book to goparts of-kinds of-reasons of-examples of-create a few chaptersgather information (probably should be in separate folders-not in notebook)informationideaspersonal experiences/illustrative anecdotesobservationssurveysinterviewsnotes from books

asthma example-

What is asthma?How does asthma feel?What does an asthma attack look like?Stories of people with asthmaElaborate on information by reusing the notebookuse conversational prompts to capture ideas on informationcompare-it’s kind of like…contrast-it’s not like…find importance/significance of something-this is important because…question-This makes me wonder…react-The surprising thing about this is…Reorganize or rename chapters if needed. We push ourselves to organize the information in a logical sequence asking ourselves what might the reader need to know first? second? and so on…

Drafting-

loose leaf paper

start drafting out paragraphs with topic sentences and information from folder examples/details

read all of our notes and information and decide how the information in this chapter will be organized . Can choose paper type that matches vision (paper can be temporary scaffold with as much or as little support as needed for each student)make sure information goes with chapter headingstudy words or phrases informational book authors use so we can add them to our writing. Words like “most” “some” “for example”elaborate on facts by using partner sentences (definitions and examples-example-Fish have gills. Gills are the slits on the side of the fish’s body that allow it to breath. OR Fish breath through gills. The gills open and close like blinds on a window.)

Revise

write detailed descriptions of objects in ways readers can picture it (baseball-not just word red stitching words etc-precise words colors textures)determine importance and pump up the parts that are importantclarify for the readers information/questions readers might haveincrease believability-don’t exaggeratetry something from a mentor text-text features: pictures with captions charts diagrams glossaries headings)look at informational in the chapter and ask “Is this logical? “Is this in order?”

Edit

edit for claritymake important vocabulary and terminology stand out with bold italics or underlinedteach conjunction words colons commas or other structures student writers will encounter

Publish


keyword :study  unit  writing  



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