Post on 04-Feb-2016
description
Writing in ScienceFall MDSD – Kindergarten
Please sign in and then talk to teams from other buildings about what they’re currently doing in science. Share the resource/idea your team brought today.
Goals for Science Today
• Share ideas and resources with other building teams for Kinder science unit
• Provide hints and tips for teachers that have yet to teach your current lesson
• Understand the importance of modeling and scaffolding in science writing
• Learn scaffolding strategies to use with students
Sharing Time• Work together to brainstorm hints and tips
to pass along to teachers who have not yet taught the same science lessons as you. Record them on chart paper.
• All of the resources, hints, and tips will be collected and shared on Connect for teachers to access when planning science lessons.
• If you have an electronic version to share, please email it to Angela Morrison.
Writing in Science• Visual scaffolding is critical in helping students
master scientific vocabulary and write like scientists.
• A word bank allows students to access vocabulary they needduring writing time.
• Display two word banks: one for specific terms for the unit and one for general science words and phrases to use in scientific writing.
Word Bank Tips• Use pocket charts with word cards.• Introduce words as students need
to know them, AFTER they have a concrete experience or investigation with the new term.
• During science discussions, point to the words or remove them from the pocket chart to hold up as visual reminders for students.
• Allow students to take words (on small cards) to their seats as neededduring writing time.
Writing Scaffolds• Students need to see models of how to
write like scientists.• Scaffolds for writing include phrases and
sentences used during a shared-writing lesson.
• Once you finish the shared-writing as a class, remove the modeled writing and replace it with a writing frame or sentence starter for students to use as they write independently.
• The frame provides a structure for their writing. Students provide the content.
Student Work
Student Work
Student Work
Student Work
Final Thoughts
• Avoid using typed fill-in-the-blank writing frames.
• Allow students to write in their notebooks, using the scaffolds posted in the room.
• Student notebooks are valued because of the students’ scientific thinking and not because of the appearance of the entries.