Day 2:
Writing
Say Say Say, Sketch Sketch Sketch, Write Write Write
Say Say Say, Sketch Sketch Sketch, Write Write Write
Teacher:
Read through the Day 2: Writing lesson plan
Writers notebook, pages divided into 3 sections (see blue image below). Make boxes on the top 1/3 of the page with a black sharpie or use 3 pages of loose-leaf with the same set up.
Students:
Whiteboards, dry erase markers and erasers. or
Paper (clipboard) and dark marker
As soon as students arrive, they can start retelling their reading homework.
This may be used as a formative assessment to adjust your teaching or provide additional support.
Start by remind the students of the last recent story that you read aloud together or use a story that they are familiar with (this will come back in step 3). Show front cover of the book if possible.
Preview vocabulary words in bold
State the strategy: Today we will be learning about how to write a draft of the beginning, middle and end of a story in three steps.
1-say
2-sketch
3-write
Teach your students how to draw a square at the top of their writer's notebook or across 3 pages of loose-leaf. I would use a sharpie to make the box visible via a videoconferencing platform.
Share this screen or click on the play button on the Google Slide below . This will open 3 icons at the top. Click on the open in a new tab icon. This will open the slide in a larger format and then you can share your screen.
Model say, say, say by talking out a the story that you reminded them of in Step 1. Use your cursor to move across the say, say, say portion of the slide.
Next, describe what you would sketch (quick drawing) out to represent each part of the story. This step is done so that you don't forget your ideas as you are writing!
Lastly, explain how you would write out the beginning (including character and setting), the middle (including a problem) and the end (resolution) using the familiar story that you chose. You won't actually have time to write it out in a microlesson.
Provide a brief second example and ask a students to finish the story by creating an ending.
Beginning: Sam was taking a walk around his neighbourhood on a drab and boring day when...
Middle: All of a sudden he looked down and saw a $20 bill near his shoe.
End: ?
Provide wait time with microphones off to create an ending.
Students may use whiteboards to sketch their ending (and remember it). They may write some key words.
On three, all students can hold up their whiteboards. Take a screen shot. Look through each response after class. Look for evidence of understanding or confusion.
Have one student finish the story for the group.
Restate the strategy and link it to other strategies that you have used to plan out and draft narrative writing.
Remind students previously taught spelling or writing lessons that you have done.
A student that is struggling to generate ideas or put their ideas on paper.
A student that has ideas and details but does not have:
a focused topic
adequate structure and organization
As a reader, you are confused when reading the piece of writing or when the student is telling you the written story.
A few support options:
Keep students after the microlesson for individual or small group support
Communicate with the remedial teacher to schedule support
See Writing Support page for ideas on how to support students
(Serravallo, 2017)
Start independent practice whenever you feel that your students have had enough modeling and guided practice.
Use daily home reading as inspiration for your story or the unfinished story that was started in class today.
Instructions for students and caregivers:
Using 3 pieces of paper say, say, say the beginning, middle and end of a story.
Then, sketch, sketch, sketch what you said for each part.
Finally, write, write, write the story that you read.
Be prepared to share tomorrow.
Support for families:
Upload the graphic organizer from this lesson to the Learning Management System (LMS) that you are using.
Notebooks or lined paper sent home in an emergency pack.
Provide a bank of high-frequency words. (this may be glued into the first page of writer's notebook).
Move to breakout rooms immediately
See Writing Support