Session 1: Creating Your Digital Writing Workshop
8:30 - 11:30 a.m.
Digital writing tools such as blogs, wikis, digital stories, and social networks can contribute to what you are already doing in your writing instruction as well as appeal to a new generation of students. In this hands-on session, we will explore how new ways of thinking about well-established practices in the writing workshop—student choice and inquiry, conferring on writing, examining author’s craft, publishing writing, and broadening our understandings of assessment—could be updated for the digital age. With examples of how to teach digital writing throughout, bring your own laptop so we can begin creating your digital writing workshop.
Session 2: Connected Reading: Apps and Approaches for Digital Texts
1:00 - 4:00 p.m.
As we adopt smartphones and tablets for 1:1 instruction, we need to review our efforts at comprehension instruction for all kinds of digital texts. Based on a survey of over 800 adolescents, we will discuss principles of "Connected Reading" and how we can adapt existing comprehension strategies in digital spaces, as well as explore new opportunities for finding, managing, and reflecting on digital texts.
Where & When
Ball State University Alumni Center
June 17, 2015
Cost
$60 for each workshop or $100 for both. Lunch is not included.
Register
Register information at our website.
Friday, April 3, 2015
Monday, February 9, 2015
Get your students writing published!
The Indiana Partnership for Young Writers seeks student writing for its 2015 anthology. They are accepting original poems, essays, memoirs, short stories, feature articles and other forms of fiction and non-fiction written by students in grades K-8 during the 2013-2014 and 2014-2015 school years.
Entries must be accompanied by a completed entry form and permission slip, which can be downloaded from their website: http://www.indianayoungwriters.org/
Entries must be accompanied by a completed entry form and permission slip, which can be downloaded from their website: http://www.indianayoungwriters.org/
Thursday, July 10, 2014
As the days get closer to a new school year...
Have you found yourself saying summer is almost over, then getting funny looks from people who don't understand that for teachers the summer is a l m o s t o v e r. Truth is summer doesn't end until September 21st, but by that time we are almost finished with the first grading period and planning for fall break or the first round of testing to be out of the way. This post was triggered by an article I just read from the Huffington Post about how hard it is to be a teacher. Although I agree with what was written, I still wouldn't give up being in education. I'm still a teacher, but I'm not in the classroom anymore. I'm the school library media specialist, the best job in the world, and I get to work with every student and every teacher without directly worrying about testing and such. I teach, troubleshoot tech issues, guide, listen, encourage, and so much more (just like the classroom teachers). Really. Anyhow, I just wanted to share this article and wish everyone the full glory of the whole summer.
Huffington Post, July 7, 2014, The Hard Part. Enjoy and let me read your thoughts, because we write on.
Huffington Post, July 7, 2014, The Hard Part. Enjoy and let me read your thoughts, because we write on.
Friday, June 27, 2014
The Need for Professional Reading
It dawned on me recently that we (Indiana Writing Project members) are indeed a group of well read professionals. Gathered in a living room we were discussing many things, but the conversation kept returning to what we have been reading professionally. It also became apparent that we really needed that professional collegiality where we could discuss the latest trends in writing and all areas of education without being snubbed or looked at as if to have the "listener" say "what the heck are you talking about?". It was great to re-join the circle. Prior to attending the Invitational Summer Institute (ISI) in 2002 I did not realize how little I had been reading professionally. The closest I could gather was what I had been required to read in my licensure courses and that doesn't always cause one to grow, just spit out papers. As a writer I could do that without any problem.
It is good to know that there is a network out there that can support that need for professionalism, writing, and just plain support where a familiar face will encourage what we don't realize we as individuals can do. You/we are never alone. The challenge becomes becoming and staying connected, to care, to invest in others who have the same undeveloped passion for writing, their students, and education as a whole. Of course, I realize it is summer which allows for some time to do those other passions and once school starts (July 31, for me) we load onto the roller coaster that never ends and sometimes we scream for a break or wish to jump off, but we remember the other riders (IWP teacher-consultants) and connect again.
I've rambled on, but my point is we value the professional collegiality that we have and we must make what we value part of that list of priorities. My other point is that we read professional publications, which is so important in education or any professional because without knowing what is going on in our profession how can we be well versed in what we are supposed to know and teach.
Thanks for allowing me to be one of those professionals who cares about what is happening in the world of education, in the National Writing Project and in my corporation. It is important to our students. We are professionals!
Write on~Robin S
It is good to know that there is a network out there that can support that need for professionalism, writing, and just plain support where a familiar face will encourage what we don't realize we as individuals can do. You/we are never alone. The challenge becomes becoming and staying connected, to care, to invest in others who have the same undeveloped passion for writing, their students, and education as a whole. Of course, I realize it is summer which allows for some time to do those other passions and once school starts (July 31, for me) we load onto the roller coaster that never ends and sometimes we scream for a break or wish to jump off, but we remember the other riders (IWP teacher-consultants) and connect again.
I've rambled on, but my point is we value the professional collegiality that we have and we must make what we value part of that list of priorities. My other point is that we read professional publications, which is so important in education or any professional because without knowing what is going on in our profession how can we be well versed in what we are supposed to know and teach.
Thanks for allowing me to be one of those professionals who cares about what is happening in the world of education, in the National Writing Project and in my corporation. It is important to our students. We are professionals!
Write on~Robin S
Labels:
colleagues,
Indiana Writing Project,
professionalism,
writing
Monday, May 19, 2014
The Ashfall Series- Intriguing to Teens and Adults
Review of Ashfall by Mike Mullin
Barbara Swander Miller
Grippingly believable, the Ashfall series by Indianapolis Native Mike Mullin has what it takes to intrigue teens and adults, alike. No wonder it has won so many awards. Alex, an average teenager left to his own devices, makes his way across the Midwest to find his family after the Yellowstone volcano erupts in a thick gray ash that erodes all sense of modern life. Along the way, Alex encounters the best and the worst of human nature in a rapidly developing dystopic society. Although readers might predict that Mullin’s unlikely protagonist emerges as a leader, the traumas that he suffers create a sense of potential realism that keeps readers turning the pages. Darla, the tough and savvy amateur engineer he meets in Ashfall, not only makes a unique foil for Alex, but also is a strong role model for young women readers. There is no problem she cannot puzzle out. As a classroom read, this series is probably best for ages 15 and up, as the two main characters face- and maturely discuss- sexual decisions and are engaged in graphically violent clashes with lawless gangs. If you like The Hunger Games or Divergent, pick up Ashfall, Ashen Winter, Sunrise and Darla’s Story.Buy Ashfall on Amazon
Friday, January 17, 2014
ISTEP SUCCESS: The “Write” Strategies, Feb. 8
Elementary and Middle School Workshops
Saturday, Feb. 8, 2014
http://iwp.iweb.bsu.edu/profdev/istep.htm
Saturday, Feb. 8, 2014
Hands-on topics include:
- ISTEP tips every student (and teacher) should know
- Quick, fun prep strategies
- Dissecting the prompt
- Powerful planning
- Revision v. draft
- Five-day prep plan
- Scoring for success
- Three types of written assessment
- Narrative v. essay
http://iwp.iweb.bsu.edu/profdev/istep.htm
Monday, August 26, 2013
Writing and Technology Workshops, Sept. 14
CREATE A HIGH-TECH LESSON WITH PREZI
Sept. 14, 20139:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Ball State University
Cost: $40.00
Instructors:
Lindsey Thompson, Shenandoah High School
Barbara Swander Miller, Alexandria Monroe Jr/Sr High School
Stacey Chester, Cowan Jr/Sr High School
Upgrade your favorite unit into a Prezi for a more engaging presentation. Learn how you and your students can use Prezi to meet Common Core Writing Standards. Bring your own materials (on flashdrive or device) to create your own Prezi to use in your classroom. Plenty of hands-on time with support.
CREATE AND INTERACTIVE UNIT WITH QR CODES AND LIVEBINDER
Sept. 14, 20131:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
Ball State University
Cost: $40.00
Instructors:
Lindsey Thompson, Shenandoah High School
Barbara Swander Miller, Alexandria Monroe Jr/Sr High School
Stacey Chester, Cowan Jr/Sr High School
Learn how to use and create QR codes that link with websites, information, or photos. Then use Livebinder to integrate QR codes, and your own Prezi, PowerPoint, podcasts or other resources into a high tech unit that will engage students and meet CCSS.
Registration
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