Monday, November 28, 2016

Fall Update Vol. 2 Issue 1


Then and Now

HHSD Writing Committee


 In Spring 2016, The Penn Literacy Network (PLN) Hatboro- Horsham SD teams completed their coursework through The University of Pennsylvania. The KV Team published a course in Canvas, our new LMS,“Collins Writing and PLN in the HHSD Classroom”.  Last year's team had hoped to make their course available to teachers near the end of last school year; however, in-services scheduling and pending Canvas implementation plan delayed the roll out to staff.  In addition to hitting pause on the release of the Canvas professional development course, the writing committee's final meeting of the year had to be postponed because of  district scheduling conflicts.  The new members joining the committee will be introduced at the committee's first meeting of the 2016-2017 year.  The fall has been packed with data digs, deeper learning initiatives, and a variety of building- based initiatives.  Much of the writing committee's work from last year is evident in our secondary classrooms, but there is still work to be done toward a vertical alignment in writing K-12. This year's PLN team from KV includes three ELA teachers and one Social Studies teacher; they look forward to continuing to build on the work from last year's team.  Since the Canvas roll out is complete for the district, the team is confident that the KV staff will appreciate the course created and updated by the PLN teams both previous and current as a professional learning tool to help guide their instructional practices, especially content area teachers.  


PLN: An Introduction 

Using a Co-constructive Model 


Over the last three years, four district teams have received graduate credit for their professional learning through PLN.  Watch this video to see for yourself what the buzz is all about.  Reach out to a PLN team member in your building to see how they can help support your literacy learning in your content area.  Interested in a coaching cycle?  Email us at +instructionalcoaches@hatboro-horsham.org.  



Published on Dec 22, 2014
The Penn Literacy Network (PLN) is a comprehensive professional development/curricular enhancement program based in the Graduate School of Education at the University of Pennsylvania. PLN has provided on-site credit-bearing seminars, workshops, and mentoring programs to more than 22,000 Pre K-12 educators across the United States and in Ireland in the areas of reading, writing, mathematics, science, and technology since 1981

http://www.gse.upenn.edu/pln






Spring Update Vol. 1 Issue 2

Then and Now

HHSD Writing Committee

In January 2016, the HHSD Writing Committee met to commonly score student work from the Fall 2015 LDC pilot.  Pilot teachers walked the committee through the instructional planning and delivery of their pilot modules.  Then, teachers from across grade levels and content areas spent the morning norming student work using the LDC rubric.  During the February district in-service days, the secondary Social Studies, Health and Physical Education, CAR, and Science teachers dove deeper into Collins Type One and Type Two.  Artifacts were collected from across departments that showcased student writing for Type One and Type Two.  KV Math received an introduction to Type One.  The Penn Literacy Network (PLN) teams recently completed their coursework through The University of Pennsylvania. The KV Team published a course in Canvas entitled “Collins Writing and PLN in the HHSD Classroom”.  It will be made available to teachers near the end of the year.  As we round out the year, the writing committee is excited to have new members joining the collaborative discussion about curriculum articulation and instruction in our district.  






FCAs: Focus Correction Areas

What’s next for the HHSD Writing Committee?

Focus Correction Areas (FCAs) are a powerful tool to help students target areas of improvement and allow teachers to grade papers quickly and efficiently. Focus correcting is a selective approach to grading student writing that allows students to concentrate on a few growth areas at a time out of hundreds of possibilities.

There are four categories to FCAs- content, organization, style, and conventions.  FCAs are used in Type Three, Type Four and Type Five writing. Three FCAs are assigned to each writing activity. One of the FCAs is always content, another is organization, and the third is always your “wildcard”. The FCAs are very clearly outlined for students so that there are no surprises.  They are refined, practiced, usually for one to two months, and spiraled throughout the year.

The shifts set forth from PA Core require writing instruction across content areas to step up instruction and assessment in order for students to be able to meet the demands.  The HHSD Literacy Frameworks support the skills and understandings that all students must demonstrate.  At the April committee meeting, teachers will begin to dialogue about the articulation and instruction of FCAs for our students.  The committee will be studying the tenants of FCAs with the goal in mind of drafting a comprehensive district guidance document for grades 3-12.  The district is exploring the opportunity to have Joe Ginotti, from The University of Pennsylvania’s PLN, work with teachers next school year.


Collins, John. “Focus Correction Areas.” Collins Education Associates. N.p., 2015. Web. 05 Apr. 2016.<http://www.collinsed.com/fca.htm>.

Penn Literacy Network University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education Resource Book. Philadelphia: Penn Literacy Network, 2014. Print.




Winter Update Vol.1 Issue 1

Then and Now

HHSD Writing Committee


Last year the HHSD Writing Committee developed a plan to achieve greater articulation for writing across grade levels.  Decisions and pilot efforts from that committee resulted in the adoption of specific practices for writing workshop at KVMS and instructional practices for “writing to learn” across the curriculum.  Writing initiatives were shared with secondary ELA, Social Studies, Health and Physical Education, and Science teachers this September and will be supported all year.  Instructional practices for writing have been drawn from the partnership with Penn Literacy Network and other research- based best practices.  The HHSD Writing Committee met in October to monitor progress in implementing writing goals and plan follow-up initiatives. 



Collins Type One and Type Two Writing

Recaps and Quick Tips


Type One writing by definition is getting ideas down on the paper.  The audience is the student writer and the teacher is a quick evaluator (i.e. Did the student write for (blank) lines for (blank) minutes?).  It’s a low-risk environment centered around generating ideas and questions.

Tip!
My favorite follow-up to a Type One writing assignment is the below-the-line activity.  In this activity, the students draw a line across the paper where the Type One writing has ended.  They then partner up with another student and share each other’s writing, adding a specified number of additional written lines “below the line,” thus adding to their original list.  I find that asking students to “add three additional lines of information or questions that you did not have on your original list” focuses the discussions and makes the students more accountable than just asking students to share (Collins, 5).




Type Two writing has a correct answer to a specific question or prompt.  The audience is the teacher who is concerned about the quality of the content and should be able to skim the response for correctness easily.  It’s helpful to have a number quantity as part of the question or prompt to aid in quick evaluation. 

Tip!
Ask students to write down two questions that can be asked at the beginning of tomorrow’s class (Type One) and record any great questions in your plan book to create a quiz for tomorrow’s opener (Type Two).  Keep your grading simplified by rotating which row of papers you collect and grade—keep it random!  You can usually grade these quizzes while your next class is taking their quiz or checking homework.  This technique of creating questions at the end of class and asking one at the beginning of the next encourages note taking, daily review of notes, ongoing formative assessment, and a check to see if the class was clear—a terrific payoff! (Collins, 12)



Resources 

Google Presentation: http://bit.ly/1ik8b7W

Padlet: http://bit.ly/1O8pFgx