Post on 23-Dec-2015
Six Traits WritingSix Traits WritingSix Traits WritingSix Traits Writing
An OverviewAn Overview
The Six Traits Model has an easy to understand, practical
vocabulary that can be adapted to fit kindergarten through high
school in a variety of modes and genres of writing.
Studies show that most teachers spend a superhuman number of hours scoring writing. To help students improve, it would help to have a common vocabulary that everyone was familiar with: students, teachers, support personnel….everyone!
Common Vocabulary for:
Teaching and learning how to write well
Scoring papers and explaining the scores
Explaining revision(how to improve a piece
of writing)
Some history…• In the early 80’s a group of teachers in Oregon
worked with NWREL (Northwest Regional Educational Laboratory) to identify the common characteristics of good writing.
• They used study findings by Paul Diederich from a 1974 article: Measuring Growth in English.
• Simultaneously, teachers is Montana, Florida and other parts of the country were creating similar approaches to assess writing.
• Vicki Spandel & Ruth Culham are two of the original team members to develop the Six Traits.
Findings• “Using the language of the traits, beginning
in kindergarten (and building on each trait throughout the next five years) gave students the opportunity to ‘talk’ about writing. This talk was extremely important and eventually became part of their writing vocabulary, just like hypothesis and data were important words to a science experiment.”
Jarmer, D., Kozal, J., Nelson, S., & Salsberry T. (2000). Northwest Regional Education Laboratory
Why Six Traits?• Common language grade to grade, year
to year• Consistency in assessment• Learn the elements of ‘good’ writing• Gives students the strategies they need
to revise (not “work on your organization” BUT “how might you enhance your conclusion to bring your writing to a satisfying end?”)
““Writing by nature is holistic. Writing by nature is holistic. An analytic approach simply An analytic approach simply
makes revision more makes revision more manageable.”manageable.”
““Writing by nature is holistic. Writing by nature is holistic. An analytic approach simply An analytic approach simply
makes revision more makes revision more manageable.”manageable.”
(from (from Creating WritersCreating Writers by Vicki by Vicki Spandel)Spandel)
Six Traits
Furniture/Fixtures CONVENTIONS
Neighborhood SENTENCE FLUENCY
Landscape/Paint WORD CHOICE
Home Design VOICE
Floor Plan ORGANIZATION
Foundation IDEAS
From Webteaching.com
Ideas and Content
• “The heart of the message, the content of the piece…all the details that enrich and develop the theme.”
NWREL.org
Ideas and Content
• Clear and controlled• Focused and relavent
• Fresh and original• Complete and well developed
Organization
• “Organization is the internal structure of a piece of writing, the thread of central meaning, the pattern.” NWREL.org
Organization
• Inviting beginning• Logical sequencing
• Thoughful transitions• Conscious closing
Voice• “Voice is the heart and soul of the
writing, the magic, the wit, the feeling, the life and breath.” NWREL.org
Voice• Connects you to your reader• Expresses feelings• Varies according to audience and
purpose• Is unique as a fingerprint
Word Choice• “Strong word choice clarifies and
expands ideas….moves and enlightens the reader” NWREL.org
Word Choice• Uses a variety of descriptive words
• Paints a picture for the reader• Is specific to audience and purpose
• Promotes clarity with precise language
A lesson learned from Joey Tribbiani:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=9s0LqZMsfTQ
Sentence Fluency• “Sentence fluency is the rhythm
and flow of the language.” NWREL.org
Sentence Fluency• Strong, well built sentences
• Varied sentence lengths• Natural rhythm and flow
• Varied sentence beginnings
Conventions• “Conventions are the good table
manners of writing.” NWREL.org
Conventions
• Capitalization• Punctuation
• Spelling• Grammar
When they are there, they are invisible. When they are missing,
it sticks out like a sore thumb.
Students need more than a score to improve their writing.
To improve, students must:
• Know what good work looks like• Compare their work to the standard• Understand how to close the gaps• Know how to use purposeful revision
and editing strategies to enhance their own work (life-long learning)
Teachers who use the model acknowledge improvement
in:• Their own confidence in the accuracy of
their scoring• Their tools for explaining grades to
student writers• Their ability to make suggestions for
revision• Student ability to assess and revise
To Teach the Traits…• Introduce the trait by teaching the concept
first.• Provide examples through authentic literature.
Use quality literature to exemplify the traits.• Write- model writing, link writing activities &
mini lessons to the traits. Help students understand what the trait is and how to improve it.
• Analyze anchor papers! Share strong and weak examples from written work.
• Provide plenty of modeling and practice.
You’re Probably Teaching the 6 Traits NOW!
Do you….Brainstorm? Do research? Make lists? Do interviews? Ask questions? Work on making the message crystal clear?
You are teaching ideas!
Do you…Organize information? Group things together that go together? Look for patterns? Write more than one lead? More than one conclusion? Work on transition words like next, therefore, after a while? Think how order helps make information more interesting?
You are teaching organization!
Do you…identify the audience? Think about what the audience already know? Wants to know? Adjust the voice/tone for the audience? Help students find their individual voice? Leave their personal mark on a piece of writing? Make sure the voice/tone matches the purpose (e.g., business letter vs. narrative)?
You are teaching voice!
Do you…stretch your students knowledge of word meanings? Explore how words are used in the literature you have read? Keep lists of favorite and least favorite words? Brainstorm alternatives for ‘Tombstone Words’? ‘$100 Words’? Explore adjectives and adverbs? Use sensory details?
You are teaching word choice!
Do you…read aloud to students? Read often- and from a variety of sources? Encourage students to read their own work aloud? Check sentence beginnings for variety? Show students how to vary sentence length by combining or detangling sentences? Work on tips for good sentences? You are teaching sentence fluency!
Do you…
ask students to proofread their work? Use dictionaries, spell check or other resources? Teach students to use copy editor symbols? Post editor symbols for quick reference? Provide students an opportunity to practice editing text that is not their own? Model editing using your own writing? Practice editing daily? Post the 100 most frequently used words for easy spelling reference?
You are teaching conventions!
7 Helpful Tips 1. Be a collector: Look through…
newspapers, greeting cards, cookbooks, brochures and pamphlets, advertisements, catalogs, postcards…
Look for…moments of voice, good or weak word choice,details, imagery, phrasing that works—or is overdone, mechanical slips and glitches, good read-aloud passages you can share.
2. Be a Reader: Identify favorite books and mark passages to read aloud. Also encourage students to identify their favorites and share.
3. Form a Network: Work with colleagues to save sample papers that would be good for scoring discussions—strong in fluency, weak in organization, etc. Trade.
4. Fill your room with trait language:Even if you aren’t teaching the 6-Traits directly, chances are you will be talking about well-developed ideas, soundorganization, smooth flowing sentences, word choice and the rest. Right?
5. MODEL:Be a writer yourself and don’t be afraid to create junk. Junk is good! It gives your students an opportunity to help you revise for ideas, organization, etc.
6. Use the Literature:start collecting books to introduce the traits. Share these authentic samples with students and let them copy from the professionals!
7. One at a Time:Remember that golf swing! Your students can only really focus on one thing at a time. Try to distinguish each trait from the next and worryabout the rest later.