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Project-Based Writing: Teaching Writers to Manage Time and Clarify Purpose [Minkštas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 224 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 231x185x13 mm, weight: 386 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Sep-2017
  • Leidėjas: Heinemann Educational Books
  • ISBN-10: 0325089809
  • ISBN-13: 9780325089805
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 224 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 231x185x13 mm, weight: 386 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Sep-2017
  • Leidėjas: Heinemann Educational Books
  • ISBN-10: 0325089809
  • ISBN-13: 9780325089805
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

The idea that students should be "college and career ready" when they leave high school has become a major focus in education, but much of this conversation has been on reading readiness. What about writing readiness?

Liz Prather argues that we can set students up for future success when we help them learn to care about what they're writing, and help them manage their time to write. "I needed a framework for teaching writing that would keep my students accountable and engaged," Liz explains, "but would allow them to write from their own passions, and instill in them an understanding of time management, goal setting, and production. By adding the tenets and practices of project-based learning, I could simultaneously protect the creative processes of my students while helping them learn to manage long term writing projects, the kind of projects they would be doing in college or in a career."

Project-Based Writing provides a 7 step structure to conceive, manage, and deliver writing projects built upon student voice and student choice. Liz includes classroom-tested strategies for helping kids persevere through roadblocks, changes in direction, failed attempts, and most importantly, "anticipate the tricks of that wily saboteur, Time." Both practical and inspirational, Project-Based Writing teaches kids the real-world lessons they need to become real-world writers.

"With this book, you will quite likely become the person students remember as the one who taught them how to write."-Cris Tovani

Foreword x
Acknowledgments xiii
Chapter One The Journey to Project-Based Writing
1(13)
Writing as an Individual Process
2(1)
Cute, Single Writing Process Seeks Robust Project Management Framework
3(7)
How to Use This Book
10(2)
A New Paradigm
12(2)
Chapter Two An Overview for Project-Based Writing: A Framework in Seven Steps
14(13)
Discovering an Idea
15(1)
Framing the Work
15(1)
Planning the Work
16(1)
Doing the Work
17(2)
Refraining the Work
19(2)
Finalizing the Work
21(1)
Revealing the Work
21(2)
A Word About Failure and the Evolution of Writing
23(2)
Recognizing Student Exigencies
25(2)
Chapter Three On Community: The Key to Building a Project-Based Writing Classroom
27(13)
Start with Story
28(1)
Embrace Transparency
29(2)
Champion the Uniqueness of Your Approach
31(1)
Establish a Happy Communal Space
32(1)
Root Yourself as Part of the Community
33(1)
Launch a Shared Narrative Space
34(5)
A Final Word on Community
39(1)
Chapter Four Discovering an Idea: The First Step of Project-Based Writing
40(28)
Cultivate a Practice of Noticing
42(1)
Cultivate a Practice of Writing
43(5)
Ten Tools for Generating Ideas
48(18)
Just Pick One Already
66(2)
Chapter Five Framing the Work: Developing a Pitch and Proposal
68(17)
How Do Students Pitch?
70(13)
How Do Students Write a Proposal?
83(2)
Chapter Six Planning the Work: Product Goals and Project Scheduling
85(20)
How Do Students Create Product-Specific Goals?
86(7)
How Do Students Create a Project Schedule?
93(10)
How Does Planning Lead to Self-Discovery?
103(2)
Chapter Seven Doing the Work: Individual Studio Time, Project Conference, and Project Library
105(20)
What Is Individual Studio Time?
105(8)
How Do Students Set Up a Project Library?
113(5)
How Do You Conference with Students About Projects?
118(5)
A Final Word on Dedicated Writing Time
123(2)
Chapter Eight Reframing the Work: Inquiry Draft, Inquiry Questions, Annotations, and Say-Back Sessions
125(26)
Inquiry Week: An Overview
125(4)
Creating Good Inquiry Questions
129(8)
How to Read, Annotate, and Respond to an Inquiry Draft
137(3)
What Are Say-Back Sessions?
140(4)
Sarah's Say-Back Session: An Example
144(4)
Weighing Say-Back Data
148(3)
Chapter Nine Finalizing the Work: Final Draft, Project Reflection, and Individual Evaluation Form
151(15)
What Matters as Students Revise the Final Product?
151(2)
How Do Students Compose the Project Reflection?
153(4)
How Do Students Create the Individual Evaluation Form?
157(6)
How Does a Final Evaluation Support Failure?
163(3)
Chapter Ten Revealing the Work: Community Score and 4P
166(11)
How Do Students Evaluate Each Other's Projects in Community Score?
166(3)
How Do Students Go Public with Their Projects?
169(8)
Chapter Eleven The Big Picture: Terms, Practices, Structures, Standards, and Grading
177(20)
Four Project-Based Writing Terms: Process, Product, Project, and Practice
177(2)
Project-Based Infrastructure: Four Perennial Practices
179(3)
Project-Based Structure: The Seven Steps
182(3)
Standards and Grading
185(10)
On Mastery and Failure
195(2)
Afterword 197(2)
Appendix 199(5)
References 204