THE
PURPOSE OF WRITING IN READING RECOVERY
We must not think of writing as a separate
part of the Reading Recovery lesson any more than we think of it as a separate
part of the child’s learning.
The purpose of both reading and writing activities in
Reading Recovery lessons are to develop for the child an effective literacy
processing system.
The realizations the child makes about reading
through writing, and about writing through reading, are dependent upon you, the
Reading Recovery teacher, helping children to make those connections.
Short writing detours during reading may help a child
learn or see relationships, just as short reading detours (re-readings of the
story) can be helpful learning aids during the story-writing segment.
TEACHING THROUGH SCAFFOLDING
Writing in the Reading Recovery lesson is a prime
illustration of teaching through scaffolded performance.
The
teacher helps a child generate a story.
Teacher
and child share the writing of the story.
The child writes as much as he can
independently
The
teacher writes things the child cannot
Teacher and child work in tutorial ways,
e.g.:
Repeated writing to learn words
Hearing and recording sounds in words
Generating new words from known words
Monitoring
work on the message is shared initially
The
teacher carries the main burden for tasks at the start of a child’s program,
but shifts that responsibility to the child as quickly as can be easily
achieved.
ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS IN SCAFFOLDING
Recruitment Frustration control while maintaining independence
Interesting
the student in the task Keeping things easy enough to be motivating
Getting
commitment to the task as a goal
Helping with decisions when student is frustrated
Reduction of degrees of freedom Demonstration
Narrowing
the task or the next move in the task
Demonstrating how a step is done
Direction maintenance Demonstrating the object of the task
Keeping
the student focused on the goal Contingency management
Marking critical features Offering praise
and/or encouragement as needed
Bringing
attention to critical features
Showing
the student where to focus attention
WRITING DECISIONS IN READING RECOVERY
Generating the story Word
learning Generating words
Teaching the task Taking
words to boxes Linking reading and writing
Using space Transition to letter boxes Decisions
on cutting up the sentence
Letter formation Transition
to working without boxes. Decisions
on language and conventions
Allowing the child to monitor writing
performance.
·
Developing independence
·
Recording and studying
the writing behaviors
·
Making transitions back
into the classroom
GENERATING THE STORY
The important thing is that the child must compose
the message and feels he/she owns it.
First talk with the child. Guided by what you know of the child start
up a conversation ...
Arising from this genuine but short conversation, and
at an appropriate point when the child shows he has something to say, you might
shift to an invitation...
(See Guidebook, p.
29.) Don’t
make the work too hard
Avoid questioning Praise the product
Demonstrations may be needed Remember
the importance of child o
Grab what comes out of his mouth Help
the child remember the story
Talk on the way to the lesson Work
for productivity and writing fluency
PROBLEMS WITH STORY GENERATION
Child cannot generate long sentences
Child is reluctant to generate sentences
Engage
child is conversation
Model
conversational roles to get full sentences
Provide
scaffolding to generate sentence if needed
Accept
short sentences initially
Give
lots of praise for what is accomplished
Child cannot remember the story
Make
a point of writing down the story as the child says it
Use
blank lines on a separate sheet as tangible reminders
Say
the sentence several times while pointing to lines
Prompt
child to re-read, using the lines if needed.
Child keeps changing the story
Explain
why it is important not to change (within reason)
Emphasize
writing down the story on lesson record
Have
child repeat the sentence several times
Use
the blank lines as tangible reminders if necessary
Have
child monitor the story for meaning and structure
Child’s sentence is ungrammatical or nonsensical
Don’t
change unless the child accepts the change
USING SPACE
How the child uses space, or attempts to use space,
gives us a window into how the child’s understands linguistic
organization.
Offer
good demonstrations in Roaming
Compare the child’s writing with
published books
Observe the child’s ideas about how
language fits together
Use the cut-up story to demonstrate
spacing.
Get the child to monitor his own
spacing
Use tangible reminders at the start,
but shift to mental models as soon as possible
Use contingency management to move
gradually to conventional spacing --
(Demonstrations; Praise, etc.)
LETTER FORMATION
The writing segment is not just about letter learning
or word learning. Remember your (and
the child’s) objective is to write a story.
If a
child doesn’t remember how to make a letter, give him the help he needs.
If the
child doesn’t know how to make a letter, pull out a magnetic letter and say,
“It’s like this.”
If the
child is slow in forming a letter you have been working on, take that letter to
fluency on the practice page
Get the
child to monitor his formation of letters (whether they resemble the correct
form)
Expect
quick, fluent writing of what he knows
Quickly
offer help and support as needed
Keep the
writing task up beat, productive, successful, and communicative
WORD LEARNING
Writing
is a primary vehicle for word learning, yet we must not distort the purpose of
the story-writing segment by converting it into a word learning time
If the
child is in the Meager-word stage here is another chance to work on a targeted
word through tracing and slow writing (Guidebook, p. 27).
Take
partially known words to fluency again during writing if you see any
lapses or hesitations
Choose
words from levels 4, 5, 6 for repeated writing rather than from levels 1, 2,
and 3. The aim is to build solid word
knowledge, which will translate into consistent use of word knowledge during
reading.
DEVELOPING WORD KNOWLEDGE
Gradual progress from unknown to known (Paraphrased from Marie Clay.)
UNKNOWN
NEW
(never seen before)
SEEN
BEFORE (can recognize as familiar)
WORKED
WITH BEFORE (Teacher can refer back to this)
ALMOST
UNDER CONTROL (Needs more work to make
it solid)
CONTROLLED
WITH LAPSES (Confusing items are
particularly susceptible)
CONTROLLED,
CORRECT (Requires conscious attention, interferes with fluency)
FAST,
FLUENT (Almost no attention required)
KNOWN
The child must learn to ...
Write
quickly what he can write by himself
Re-read
the sentence (as necessary) to generate the next word
Decide
whether he needs help on the up-coming word, and ask for help as needed
Use the
practice page to try out a word or letter of which he is unsure
Manipulate
tokens in boxes to hear and record sounds in sequence
Write
into his story quickly the things he has decided on or practiced on the
practice page
Think of
a word similar to the word he wants to write and use that pattern to help him
generate the word
Re-read
to monitor, edit, and punctuate and make sure everything fits together
RATIONALE FOR USE OF BOXES AND TOKENS
Sound
segments (phonemes) are not distinct (they are melded with neighboring
sounds) and they are abstract (sound different in different
contexts)
Learning
something abstract is much easier if it can be represented in concrete,
tangible form
Elkonin’s
procedures help the child become aware of speech sound units smaller than the
word
The use of
tokens and boxes makes it easier for the child to understand the alphabetic
principle
Going from
the sounds to letters is easier than going from letters to sounds
Tactile
contact and motor movements are easy and natural ways of learning for children
Focus on
sequence of sounds is important
The boxes
and tokens should become an independent learning tool for the child
Boxes are
a temporary phase for children who must internalize the process of hearing and
recording sounds
INAPPROPRIATE DECISIONS WITH BOXES
Avoiding
using boxes because teachers are unsure or hesitant about their use
Reverting to
classroom practices like Sound Quizzing or Phonics Quizzing rather than using
boxes
Being too
helpful and not developing independence
Taking
inappropriate words to boxes, or use boxes when boxes won’t help
Taking tokens
away too early (before letter boxes)
Making the
use of boxes too difficult so the child develops resistance
Not helping
the child transition to saying the word slowly and recording the sounds as he
writes new words
Avoiding
boxes because the child has immature speech or is learning English as a second
language
THE IMPORTANCE OF HEARING SOUNDS IN WORDS
The
ability to hear sounds in sequence is critical in learning to read and
write. Sounds are one of the
information sources available to young learners as they learn to read. Beginning readers must learn to try out a
response to a new word, analyze the sounds of that word, anticipate the letters
to represent those sounds, and compare that to the printed word.
See the
diagram on page 42 in Guidebook.
GENERATING WORDS
Sometimes you have to make it like another word you
know which means get it by analogy with a common spelling pattern used in
English. Guidebook, p. 35
Parts of the lesson that help with generating words
Making and
breaking words (Section 10)
Taking
words apart while reading (Section 11)
Generating words during writing (Section
6)
Testing
for control of letter groups (Section
11, p. 51)
LINKING READING AND WRITING
Children in Reading Recovery are not good at making
connections; Reading Recovery teachers have to continually demonstrate and
prompt for connections in order for them to begin to occur independently. Below are some of the activities useful for
linking:
Writing a
word as a means of recall Making
and breaking words
(See
Guidebook. p. 35) Making analogies (M & B) – TWAWR
etc.)
Writing as
a means of word learning Cut
up sentence
During
reading of a book Analyzing
running records
After
reading of a book Analyzing
writing interactions
Verbal
prompts during searching Conversations
about the links
E.g.,
That’s a word you can write
Word
checking after the running record