Monday, February 21, 2011

"I don't want my body to be a distraction from my talent or my brain." ~Shania Twain

  


      Distractions, we know as teachers that our students will face so many distractions during a school day, because lets face it, so will we. The way we handle these distractions is what makes us or breaks us. Ray does a great job of reassuring me with ways to handle distractions during Writing Workshop. One thing Ray said that really struck me is that we need to have faith in our students to stay engaged while working for longer periods of time. She brings up the fact that when students are all working on a uniformed task like a worksheet, we never second guess if they are staying on task but we do when we allow them to have the freedom to choose what interests them. Why is this? Shouldn't the opposite be true? Again, I think it goes back to having faith that our students want to learn and that they are interested in things and are willing to explore and put in the time.
     One key ingredient to having a successful Writing Workshop is the space that you allow your students to use. I can remember back when I was in elementary school I can remember teachers having lofts in their classrooms and how exciting it was to get to use them to do your work. So having these experiences makes me appreciate the use of different classroom spaces. At the same time I am nervous about using couches or bean bags in my classroom because how can we fairly determine when and what students get to use them? Ray brings up a great point by saying that you could let the students themselves set up some sort of system to determine who works best in what spots and what type of rotation schedule will be used.
     Chapter 8 scared me a little. Writing Workshops will indeed be hectic and challenging. The key is to have them planned out enough to understand how to deal with them when they veer in a different direction then what was originally planned. I love how Ray talks about how terrible Writing Workshop "kits" are. Isn't the great thing about Writing Workshops the freedom to choose what you want to write about, so by using kits we are secretly limiting our students to what WE want them to write about. Again, bringing this time meant for them back to meet Our standards as well as the schools. There are ways to have students follow what you would like them to do, but simply letting students pick from a few topics is not the way. "Kits" are an easy way out and as teachers it's not our job to short our students just because it takes less effort on our part.

1 comments:

Beth said...

I think your idea to let kids design a system to sit in the seats (or use whatever other cool things you have for them) is an excellent idea. Students will buy in to the rules if they had a part in creating ones that seem fair to them.

I also couldn't agree more about topic choice...seems so intuitive to let them do things that are important to their lives.

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