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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: SCBWI-FL, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 25 of 42
1. Teaching the Four Types of Writing Through Texts

Janiel Wagstaff's books will help you teach primary writers about the four types of writing in an engaging way. Leave a comment on this post for a chance to win her series of Stella books.

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2. Teaching the Four Types of Writing Through Texts

Janiel Wagstaff's books will help you teach primary writers about the four types of writing in an engaging way. Leave a comment on this post for a chance to win her series of Stella books.

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3. Looking at Student Writing

Comparing two writing samples may be as effective as scoring using a rubric

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4. Dialogue in First Grade

See how these first graders added dialogue to their narrative writing.

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5. Brave Spelling

How can we encourage our youngest writers to use brave spelling? How can we help them overcome their fear of getting it wrong?

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6. In Thanks: Books That Built a Writing Teacher

What are the books that have shaped you as a teacher of writing? Reflecting today, in thanks, for the authors and books that have influenced my life as a teacher.

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7. Setting the Stage for Summer: Write from the Start!

So I stepped back and let the writers get to work. The chatter was about organizing notebooks, planning where they like to write and sharing writing over the summer.

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8. Making a Chart: When I’m Done with My Writing

A chart for first graders

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9. All About the Paper.

Sometimes making a small change can produce big results.

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10. What Do You Know About Being a Writer?

Listen to these kindergarten students respond to the question, "What do you know about being a writer?"

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11. Quick and Easy Summer Writing Idea for our Youngest Students

This nighttime drawing journal is the perfect summer keepsake for our youngest writers.

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12. How Do First Graders Choose Narrow Topics?

We will be starting a unit on informational writing to wrap up the school year. I wanted to demonstrate a different way of finding a topic, a narrow topic. I find that young… Continue reading

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13. First Graders Get Crafty

First graders use a mentor text to get crafty during a unit on informational writing.

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14. On Being a Writer

Can first graders write Slice of Life Stories?

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15. Digital Tools Invite Writers to Compose – #NCTE13

Two of the sessions I attended at NCTE in Boston helped me think about ways two digital tools could be meaningfully integrated into early childhood and elementary school classrooms to engage young writers. The "Exploring Collaboration of Multimodal Literacies in Early Childhood: Digital Filmmaking, Designing, and Co-Authoring" panel discussed the way digital video cameras could enhance learning, while two of the presenters in "Writing Workshop Is for All Students: Using Visuals, Oral Language, and Digital Tools to Maximize Success and Independence for English Language Learners" suggested the incorporation of digital cameras.

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16. Letting Go As Student Interests Take the Wheel

Kindergarten teacher Valerie Geshwind helps her Kindergarten students find their passions and their voice by honoring their interests, engaging them in a play-like writing workshop, & by supporting them as individuals.

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17. What Would They Say?

What would your students say if they were asked what writing workshop means to them? Find out what a group of first graders value about writing workshop in Betsy Hubbard's guest blog post.

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18. I don’t know what to write. Really? Really.

Sarah Picard Taylor provides you with five ideas to get K - 2 writers writing when they find themselves stuck.

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19. Sharing Voices by Blogging: A Guest Blog Post by Amy Rudd

About four years ago, I heard of a wonderful tool, Kidblog, that could be used as an ad-free environment when blogging with students and the key word that caused me to perk up when… Read More

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20. Primary Teachers: I need your advice, please!

How much time do you think K-2 students need to complete an on-demand narrative writing assessment?

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21. Hilary McKay Blog Tour!! Interview and Giveaway

I am very excited today to be part of the Hilary McKay Blog Tour! Today she is stopping by for an interview focused mainly on her books Lulu and the Duck in the Park and Lulu and the Dog by the Sea. These two endearing early chapter books are a delight to read. I will be giving away copies to two lucky commentors on today's post, so make sure you stick around and put in your two cents at the

3 Comments on Hilary McKay Blog Tour!! Interview and Giveaway, last added: 3/29/2013
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22. Friday Poetry: In the Land of Milk and Honey

by Joyce Carol Thomas, illustrated by Floyd Cooper. Amistad, 2012. (review copy/F&G) I received an "F & G" from the publisher for this book. What that means is it is not the final bound version but just the printed and gathered pages. The illustrations are so beautiful in this book I think I am going to have to frame some of them, so having the pages unbound makes that easier! :) In 1948 Joyce

9 Comments on Friday Poetry: In the Land of Milk and Honey, last added: 2/2/2013
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23. Review: Africa for Kids; Exploring a Vibrant Continent

by Harvey Croze.Chicago Review Press, 2006. (review copy from IPG). I am enjoying this engaging, fascinating, factual book on the continent of Africa. It is full of colorful photos, maps, diagrams, artwork and detailed information on a wide variety of aspects of life in Africa. There are 19 features hands-on activities that children can complete with some help from an adult. All in all it is a

5 Comments on Review: Africa for Kids; Exploring a Vibrant Continent, last added: 1/30/2013
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24. An Inspiring Mentor Text, an Interview, and a Giveaway

I love, LOVE, L-O-V-E  Ralph Tells A Story (Amazon Children’s Publishing, 2012), which is a story about a boy, Ralph, who has trepidation about writing. (It’s already become a book I suggest to… Read More

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25. Review: Dreaming Up

by Christy Hale. Lee and Low, 2012. (netgalley review copy) Christy Hale has put together a collection of charming concrete poems celebrating children's favorite building toys and activities. Each full page spread shows children engaged in building projects paired with photos of actual buildings that mirror the profile of the children's buildings. Architects including Frank Lloyd Wright, Cesar

7 Comments on Review: Dreaming Up, last added: 10/10/2012
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