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Teaching Writing Organization Using
the ReadWriteThink Web Site
By: Mae Guerra, Stan Sameshima, Ross White
Many of our students are failing to meet the requirements of the Colorado Model Content
Standard in writing organization. This standard includes the Colorado Department of
Education Writing Standard 2:
Students write and speak for a variety of purposes and audiences. In order to meet
the standard in writing, students will organize written and oral presentations
using strategies such as lists, outlining, cause/effect relationships,
comparison/contrast, problem/solution, and narration.
Students will complete these writing presentations by utilizing the webbing tool
called ReadWriteThink. The goal of this report is to provide an online tool such as the
Read-Write-Think webbing tool to help students improve their writing skills in
organization. If students do not improve their writing skills in the area of organization
students will fall deeper behind in the writing process and the learning gap will widen
every year.
Learner Analysis
In today’s world students feel more connected to their computers then ever
before. The type of students that teachers encounter in their classrooms today is referred
to as the Net Generation. The Net Generation (N-Gen) is defined as the population of
about 90 million young people who have grown up or are growing up in constant contact
with digital media (Tapscott, 1998). The Net Generation expects that technology will be
an important part of their education. Computers and the attendant technology have to be
regarded as essential—as thinking aids (Johnson, 2001) or mind tools (Jonassen 1996).
The Net Generation has grown up with information technology. The attitudes,
expectations, and learning styles of Net Gen students reflect the environment in which
they were raised—one that is decidedly different from that which existed when teachers
were growing up.
Most Net Gen learners prefer to learn by doing rather by being told what to do.
Net Gen students learn well through discovery—by exploring for themselves or with their
peers. This exploratory style enables them to better retain information and use it in
creative, meaningful ways. The Net Gen is oriented toward discovery, making
observations, and figuring out the rules. They thrive in rapid pace environments and
choose to not to pay attention if a class is not interactive, or simply too slow. (Prensky
2001) The use of interactive tools such as the Read-Write-Think program then becomes
essential to the students in this Net Gen.
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Tool Description
Our team has created a Wiki to facilitate the use of ReadWriteThink at the school
level. A Wiki is a web page that members are allowed to edit. The intended purpose of
the Wiki is to provide a place for educators from each school to share lesson plans and
ideas about how to effectively use the interactive tools of ReadWriteThink. Each school
will have identical Wiki to begin with, a page that provides links to, descriptions of, and
sample lesson plans for tools from ReadWriteThink. After the introduction of the
program, teachers from each school will be able to edit their school’s Wiki. In this space,
they can add additional links that pertain to teaching organization in writing or provide
comments on what was useful and what wasn’t. They can also attach relevant lesson
plans as word documents to the page. Since each school has its own curriculum,
philosophy, and grade levels, the within school Wiki system will streamline efforts to
meet the specific goals and needs of each school.
The Read-Write-Think online tool offers an array of online student materials to
support reading and writing in the K-12 classroom. These interactive tools can be used to
provide an opportunity for students to use technology while developing their reading and
writing skills. There are many materials on this site that students can use to help them
with their writing skills. The materials chosen to review are tools that are used primarily
for writing organization in the pre-writing stage. Some examples of these materials
include:
1. Circle Plot Diagram
2. Comic Creator
3. Comparison and Contrast
4. Essay Map
5. Webbing Tool
The Circle Plot Diagram tool is used as a prewriting graphic organizer for
students writing original stories with a circular plot structure as well as a post reading
organizer used to explore the text structures in a book. When used as a prewriting
exercise, the diagram can be printed out and shared with peers and teacher for feedback
and revision in this phase of the writing process.
The Comic Creator tool asks students to create their own comic strips for a variety
of purposes such as prewriting, pre- and post reading activities and literature responses.
This tool focuses on key elements of comic strips by allowing students to choose
backgrounds, characters, and props. After completing their comic, students have the
ability to print out and illustrate their final versions for feedback and assessment.
The Comparison and Contrast tool outlines the characteristics of the genre and
provides direct instruction on the methods of organizing, gathering ideas, and writing
comparison and contrast essays. The Comparison and Contrast tool includes an
organizing a paper section that explains to students how graphic organizers are used for
comparison and contrast.
The Essay Map is an interactive graphic organizer that enables students to
organize and outline their ideas for an informational, definitional, or descriptive essay.
This graphic organizer tool helps students develop an outline for main ideas that they
3
want to discuss or describe in their essay. The tool uses many ways to utilize information
in a linear fashion in which students can visualize their thoughts before prewriting.
The Webbing Tool provides a quick way for students to trace out options and
rearrange connections in prewriting and post-reading activities. Students can use the
Webbing Tool to analyze readings as well as a prewriting activity and flowcharting tool.
Students can drag the circle or box shapes representing their ideas to arrange any layout
and relationship that they want. Each layer on the chart will have a different color border
for the shapes that you choose. Customized versions of the tool, which include additional
instructions and more focused choices, are included with some lessons.
Learning Processes
Writing is best understood as a set of distinctive thinking processes in which the
writer organizes during writing (Hayes & Flowers, 1981). In this perspective, writing is
not viewed as a simple step-by-step process but rather a hierarchal set of cognitive
processes. In simple terms, the act of writing involves the continual use and interaction
of several mental processes. A writer must plan, organize their thoughts, consider their
audience, revise and edit, as well as communicate a message clearly and coherently. For
students, organizing ideas in writing is often a difficult task.
Writing instruction for better organization is often facilitated by making this
process visual through the use of graphic organizers. These tools provide students with
scaffolding; a concrete format to organize their thoughts. Further scaffolding of
organizing in writing is provided by clear and explicit modeling of this skill from the
teacher. Collins (1998) views modeling as a key component of learning and points out
that the teacher must make the target processes highly visible to the student. Some
educators have labeled this modeling technique as “thinking out loud”. Therefore,
students might learn best learn how to organize there writing with the instruction that
includes both graphic organizers and teacher modeling.
Interactive graphic organizers are a new and exciting way to make learning visual
on the web. Like paper based organizers, these tools further scaffold student learning by
walking students through a step-by-step process to use graphic organizers. They also
serve to increase student engagement and motivation by allowing them to actively
manipulate information with technology. ReadWriteThink also provides students with a
range of interactive graphic organizers that are specific to the writing genre.
Ultimately, the intended goal of using an interactive graphic organizer is to
improve organization skills in writing. Teachers should evaluate whether or not the use of
these organizers are helping students to organize their thoughts. Evidence of this learning
should be evident in the thoughtful segregation of events and ideas by the student in the
drafts of writing they produce from their graphic organizers.
Instructional Strategy/Tool Use
Using an online interactive graphic organizer may be a more effective tool than
traditional paper-based organizers. March (2006) suggests that educators must use
technology to create learning experiences that are real, rich, and relevant. Indeed,
students may find an online tool more relevant to their learning simply because it is in a
format that they find familiar and important to their success. For many of them, this
interactive online organizer is relatively straightforward compared to complex video and
4
computer games they frequently play. Furthermore, Prensky (2001) suggests that
computer games, like interactive graphic organizers, promote cognitive traits that are
consistent with children raised with technology.
Students also learn best when they have high levels of motivation. According to
Keller’s Arc Model of Instruction (1983), students will be more motivated when students
see modeling, have experience, and encounter variability in their learning. In theory,
students should be confident in their skills and excited to engage these graphic organizers
after a teacher explicitly models the process. Also, by using an interactive computer
format, students will be able to utilize their own prior experiences using similar programs
such as Kidspiration and Microsoft Word. And while many students are quick to
disengage from paper based graphic organizers, student motivation should be enhanced
by the variability induced by interactive graphic organizers.
For educators to utilize the interactive tools available on ReadWriteThink, their
students need access to the internet. Students are not allowed to save their work on this
program so teachers should allow enough time for students to complete and print their
graphic organizers. Given the constraints of time and availability of technology, teachers
should spend ample time preparing students for this activity. Teachers should decide if
their students need to fill out a blank organizer on paper before completing one in the lab.
This is especially true for students that need additional scaffolding. In this case, teachers
must find ways to adapt a paper version prior to the computer, since they cannot
manipulate the digital version on this website.
In an effort to assess student performance on these skills, educators should collect
the student print outs of their graphic organizers. Teachers will need to assess whether or
not students are accurately organizing ideas. In general, these graphic organizers are step-
by-step in nature, so teachers can assess where students are struggling by working
through the tool with the student. Also, teachers need to model and observe how they use
these organizers when writing their drafts.
Technology How-To
The ReadWriteThink webpage is divided into 4 parts. It has a section with about
700 lesson plans, a second section listing the IRA/NCTA English Language Arts
Standards, a third section containing a list of web resources, and a fourth section labeled
Student Materials, containing the tools that students may use online.
Within the ReadWriteThink website there are lesson plans that can be sorted into
K-2, 3-5, 6-8, and 9-12 grade levels. The lesson plans can by seen by clicking on the
column title, which seems more useful than the other available methods of sorting by
alphabetical order or date of creation. The lesson plans are very complete and well
written and you may be able to find the topic or activity you want for your grade level.
They vary from simple and basic printouts to very long and complex plans leading to
products containing audio and/or video links.
The ReadWriteThink web site also has “Web Resources Gallery” which has
nearly 700 links to literature lists, professional development information, copyright
information, software tutorials, online encyclopedias, dictionaries and all things
educational. There are dropdown menus at the top of the list to filter by grade level and
by the topics of All Web Resources, Instructional Resources, Professional Development,
5
Reference Library, and Student Resources. By filtering for the grade level and category
desired the list will become a more useful size.
The most beneficial aspect of this website is the student materials section.. There
is a technical support page with downloads for any plug-ins that your browser may need
to use the site and there are fifty tools to choose from! Many are specific to organizing a
topic or specific literary element or product such as a riddle, poem, postcard, book cover,
letter, or fractured fairy tale, but some are tools useful for organizing writing with enough
flexibility to fit a variety of purposes. Among these are the Circle Plot Diagram, Comic
Creator, Compare and Contrast Guide, Essay Map, and the Webbing Tool.
When using the Circle Plot Diagram, students open the tool and fill in the events
in their story. The box with the event is then placed onto a diagram with arrows showing
the flow of events. The last event in the plot leads back to the beginning event creating a
circular plot. The diagram can be used to diagram events in a circular story, such as If
You Give a Mouse a Cookie by Laura Numeroff. As a writing tool, it organizes your
circular plot story so you are ready to write!
The Comic Creator starts with a student choosing one, two, three or six panels.
The panels allow the students to choose a background, add a caption to the bottom, and
choose characters, dialogue balloons and props to add to each panel. To aid in preparing
for this, there is a “Comic Strip Planning Sheet” with blanks for the scene and actions, the
caption, the characters, and the props. After planning the comic strip can be created. As
with all the interactive pages on the site, students must complete the panels and print
before they log off of the site.
The Comparison and Contrast Guide does not create one specific graphic
organizer, but explains the purpose and organization of a “Comparison and Contrast”
paper. It is a tutorial or lesson similar to a PowerPoint that an older student could go
through one slide at a time or a teacher could go through with a younger student or
students. It presents and explains three strategies for writing a Comparison and Contrast
paper:
Whole-to-Whole or Block Similarities-to-Differences Point-by-Point
tell everything about one
item and then everything
about the other item
explain all the similarities
and then all the differences
tell similarity or difference
for each point or topic, one
at a time
Introduction
Item 1
Item 2
Conclusion
Introduction
Similarities
Differences
Conclusion
Introduction
Point #1
Point #2
Conclusion
Students are instructed to cover all the points and keep things in the same order
when moving from one step to the next. After explaining the three ways to structure the
writing, the guide then suggests three different graphic organizers to choose from. There
is a student resource for a Venn diagram with two circles, a Venn diagram with three
circles and a Compare and Contrast Chart to organize before writing. There are also lists
of transition words for comparing and contrasting and a checklist of “things to pay
attention to.”
6
The Essay Map is a graphic organizer with room to actually write a short essay
using the available structure of the organizer. There is room to type an introduction, three
main ideas (the box will hold nine lines of type), each with three supporting details (three
lines of type), and all leading to one concluding paragraph. This tool is a limited in its
use, but could be useful for an intermediate age student who has trouble organizing a
paper.
The last tool described is the Webbing Tool. This tool is a free form tool to create
a graphic organizer. The student chooses between using circles or boxes and may create
as many as desired, place them anywhere, and connect them in any pattern. All of the
tools, with the exception of the Compare and Contrast tool, are simple to use and easy for
a student to begin using without any prior practice or instruction. The difficulty would be
in making sure that the student has enough time to finish the task and print the product,
since there is no way to save the work for a later time. Most of the tools allow for printing
an unfinished product which could be completed with a pencil. Except for this lack of
ability to save work for completion at a later time, the tools are extremely useful and
should be interesting for students to work with.
The twelve IRA/NCTA English Language Arts Standards are listed on a page and
links are provided to the International Reading Association and the National Council of
Teachers of English.
The Wikispaces.com page we created is visible to anyone searching the Web and
anyone may view or download the lesson plans or use the link to the ReadWriteThink
Website. It may be edited by anyone added to the membership, which for now are the
three creators. Plans are for the membership to grow as the staffs for various worksites
are added. When permission is granted any member may click on the edit button to add
or delete content whenever they want. The administrator or manager of the site may not
stop members from editing, but can revoke the editing privilege of a member. A manager
may also access a saved history of the site to restore the page’s previous content.
Recommendations/Future Actions
The future action isWe intend to bring back the information learned from the
ReadWriteThink web site to our individual schools. Staff members at our schools will be
trained to use the ReadWriteThink tool effectively through a staff development meeting.
In this meeting teachers will learn how to use the ReadWriteThink site through a web
page developed in Wikispaces. Wikispaces is a web site that allows its authors to create
simple web pages that groups, friends, and families can edit together.
In our Wikispace site, we have shared information learned from the
ReadWriteThink web site into an informative web page that explores different strategies
on how to help students write with better organization. Once we have shared this
information from the Wiki with our staff then the teachers will be able to add or edit
information from the Wiki. In this collaborative manner of adding and editing
information the Wiki will grow and expand into a bigger web page in which all staff
members can enter their knowledge about helping students write with better organization.
Conclusion/Reflection
Overall, interactive graphic organizers from ReadWriteThink are a compelling
tool for writing instruction. These organizers help scaffold student cognitions when
7
writing and enable teachers to effectively model their own thinking about writing. The
interactive and technological components of these organizers suit the interests and prior
experiences of the modern student. They also enhance student motivation and
engagement. Ultimately, teachers need to think about how they would effectively
incorporate these tools into their existing writing curriculum. And regardless of the
lesson, teachers need to explicitly model the use of these tools for the organizers to be
effective.
On our team’s Wiki, teachers from our own schools will have access to lesson
plans that demonstrate the use of these graphic organizers. Teachers will not only have
access to this website, but they will be allowed to edit the Wiki within each individual
school. The hope is that teachers will use the graphic organizers from ReadWriteThink
and eventually, contribute their own graphic organizer lesson plans to the Wiki. This
within school sharing system on the Wiki is designed to increase the efficiency and
quality of the existing curriculum by providing school and grade specific lesson plans
that demonstrate effective use of interactive graphic organizers.
References
Colorado Department of Education (1995, July 13). Colorado model content standards
for reading and writing. Retrieved June 13, 2007, from Colrado Department of Education
Web site: http://www.cde.state.co.us/cdeassess/documents/standards/reading.pdf
Collins, A. (2001) Cognitive Apprenticeship: Making Thinking Visible. American
Educator, Winter Edition, pp.1-18.
Flower, L & Hayes, J. (1981). A cognitive process theory of writing. College
Composition and Communication, Vol. 32, No. 4. pp. 365-387.
Johnson, S.(2001) Emergence: The connected lives of ants, brains, cities, and software.
Toronto: Scribner.
Jonassen, D. (1996) Computers in the classroom: Mind tools for critical thinking. New
Jersey: Prentice Hall.
Keller, J. (1983) Development and use of the ARCS model of motivational design.
Enschede, The Netherlands: Toegepaste Onderwijskunde, Technische Hogeschool
Twent. (24 pages)
March, T. (2006) The New WWW: Whatever, Whenever. Whereever. Educational
Leadership, pp.14-19.
Prensky, M. (2001) Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants, Part II: Do They Really Think
Differently?” On the Horizon, vol. 9, no. 6 (December 2001), pp. 15–24; available from
<http://www.marcprensky.com/writing/>.
Tapscott, D. 1998. Growing up digital: The rise of the Net Generation. New York:
McGraw-Hill.
8
Appendix
Our team searched for an interactive tool to address the need for students to
improve the organization of their writing. After searching the Web we could only find
one site that with truly interactive tool for students, the ReadWriteThink.org Website.
We used the tools provided on the site and began sharing our findings by emailing each
other and attaching any documents that we were working on. We decided to write a few
simple lesson plans, specific to our intended audience, that incorporated the tools
provided on the site. We decided to post these to a Wiki where anyone could access them
and the three of us would all be able to edit the page. The Wikispaces.com site that we
are using will only allow for one “manager” of the page, who has control over who will
be allowed to edit the page. Now we are creating three copies of the page so that we will
each have control over the membership of our separate pages, so that we may add our
building staff or other colleagues to the membership. We would still be able to enlarge or
combine the memberships of our pages by sharing with each other as we feel appropriate.
Our report was done as a Word document and the Track Changes tool was used to mark
the changes we made to the document.

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Read Write Think

  • 1. 1 Teaching Writing Organization Using the ReadWriteThink Web Site By: Mae Guerra, Stan Sameshima, Ross White Many of our students are failing to meet the requirements of the Colorado Model Content Standard in writing organization. This standard includes the Colorado Department of Education Writing Standard 2: Students write and speak for a variety of purposes and audiences. In order to meet the standard in writing, students will organize written and oral presentations using strategies such as lists, outlining, cause/effect relationships, comparison/contrast, problem/solution, and narration. Students will complete these writing presentations by utilizing the webbing tool called ReadWriteThink. The goal of this report is to provide an online tool such as the Read-Write-Think webbing tool to help students improve their writing skills in organization. If students do not improve their writing skills in the area of organization students will fall deeper behind in the writing process and the learning gap will widen every year. Learner Analysis In today’s world students feel more connected to their computers then ever before. The type of students that teachers encounter in their classrooms today is referred to as the Net Generation. The Net Generation (N-Gen) is defined as the population of about 90 million young people who have grown up or are growing up in constant contact with digital media (Tapscott, 1998). The Net Generation expects that technology will be an important part of their education. Computers and the attendant technology have to be regarded as essential—as thinking aids (Johnson, 2001) or mind tools (Jonassen 1996). The Net Generation has grown up with information technology. The attitudes, expectations, and learning styles of Net Gen students reflect the environment in which they were raised—one that is decidedly different from that which existed when teachers were growing up. Most Net Gen learners prefer to learn by doing rather by being told what to do. Net Gen students learn well through discovery—by exploring for themselves or with their peers. This exploratory style enables them to better retain information and use it in creative, meaningful ways. The Net Gen is oriented toward discovery, making observations, and figuring out the rules. They thrive in rapid pace environments and choose to not to pay attention if a class is not interactive, or simply too slow. (Prensky 2001) The use of interactive tools such as the Read-Write-Think program then becomes essential to the students in this Net Gen.
  • 2. 2 Tool Description Our team has created a Wiki to facilitate the use of ReadWriteThink at the school level. A Wiki is a web page that members are allowed to edit. The intended purpose of the Wiki is to provide a place for educators from each school to share lesson plans and ideas about how to effectively use the interactive tools of ReadWriteThink. Each school will have identical Wiki to begin with, a page that provides links to, descriptions of, and sample lesson plans for tools from ReadWriteThink. After the introduction of the program, teachers from each school will be able to edit their school’s Wiki. In this space, they can add additional links that pertain to teaching organization in writing or provide comments on what was useful and what wasn’t. They can also attach relevant lesson plans as word documents to the page. Since each school has its own curriculum, philosophy, and grade levels, the within school Wiki system will streamline efforts to meet the specific goals and needs of each school. The Read-Write-Think online tool offers an array of online student materials to support reading and writing in the K-12 classroom. These interactive tools can be used to provide an opportunity for students to use technology while developing their reading and writing skills. There are many materials on this site that students can use to help them with their writing skills. The materials chosen to review are tools that are used primarily for writing organization in the pre-writing stage. Some examples of these materials include: 1. Circle Plot Diagram 2. Comic Creator 3. Comparison and Contrast 4. Essay Map 5. Webbing Tool The Circle Plot Diagram tool is used as a prewriting graphic organizer for students writing original stories with a circular plot structure as well as a post reading organizer used to explore the text structures in a book. When used as a prewriting exercise, the diagram can be printed out and shared with peers and teacher for feedback and revision in this phase of the writing process. The Comic Creator tool asks students to create their own comic strips for a variety of purposes such as prewriting, pre- and post reading activities and literature responses. This tool focuses on key elements of comic strips by allowing students to choose backgrounds, characters, and props. After completing their comic, students have the ability to print out and illustrate their final versions for feedback and assessment. The Comparison and Contrast tool outlines the characteristics of the genre and provides direct instruction on the methods of organizing, gathering ideas, and writing comparison and contrast essays. The Comparison and Contrast tool includes an organizing a paper section that explains to students how graphic organizers are used for comparison and contrast. The Essay Map is an interactive graphic organizer that enables students to organize and outline their ideas for an informational, definitional, or descriptive essay. This graphic organizer tool helps students develop an outline for main ideas that they
  • 3. 3 want to discuss or describe in their essay. The tool uses many ways to utilize information in a linear fashion in which students can visualize their thoughts before prewriting. The Webbing Tool provides a quick way for students to trace out options and rearrange connections in prewriting and post-reading activities. Students can use the Webbing Tool to analyze readings as well as a prewriting activity and flowcharting tool. Students can drag the circle or box shapes representing their ideas to arrange any layout and relationship that they want. Each layer on the chart will have a different color border for the shapes that you choose. Customized versions of the tool, which include additional instructions and more focused choices, are included with some lessons. Learning Processes Writing is best understood as a set of distinctive thinking processes in which the writer organizes during writing (Hayes & Flowers, 1981). In this perspective, writing is not viewed as a simple step-by-step process but rather a hierarchal set of cognitive processes. In simple terms, the act of writing involves the continual use and interaction of several mental processes. A writer must plan, organize their thoughts, consider their audience, revise and edit, as well as communicate a message clearly and coherently. For students, organizing ideas in writing is often a difficult task. Writing instruction for better organization is often facilitated by making this process visual through the use of graphic organizers. These tools provide students with scaffolding; a concrete format to organize their thoughts. Further scaffolding of organizing in writing is provided by clear and explicit modeling of this skill from the teacher. Collins (1998) views modeling as a key component of learning and points out that the teacher must make the target processes highly visible to the student. Some educators have labeled this modeling technique as “thinking out loud”. Therefore, students might learn best learn how to organize there writing with the instruction that includes both graphic organizers and teacher modeling. Interactive graphic organizers are a new and exciting way to make learning visual on the web. Like paper based organizers, these tools further scaffold student learning by walking students through a step-by-step process to use graphic organizers. They also serve to increase student engagement and motivation by allowing them to actively manipulate information with technology. ReadWriteThink also provides students with a range of interactive graphic organizers that are specific to the writing genre. Ultimately, the intended goal of using an interactive graphic organizer is to improve organization skills in writing. Teachers should evaluate whether or not the use of these organizers are helping students to organize their thoughts. Evidence of this learning should be evident in the thoughtful segregation of events and ideas by the student in the drafts of writing they produce from their graphic organizers. Instructional Strategy/Tool Use Using an online interactive graphic organizer may be a more effective tool than traditional paper-based organizers. March (2006) suggests that educators must use technology to create learning experiences that are real, rich, and relevant. Indeed, students may find an online tool more relevant to their learning simply because it is in a format that they find familiar and important to their success. For many of them, this interactive online organizer is relatively straightforward compared to complex video and
  • 4. 4 computer games they frequently play. Furthermore, Prensky (2001) suggests that computer games, like interactive graphic organizers, promote cognitive traits that are consistent with children raised with technology. Students also learn best when they have high levels of motivation. According to Keller’s Arc Model of Instruction (1983), students will be more motivated when students see modeling, have experience, and encounter variability in their learning. In theory, students should be confident in their skills and excited to engage these graphic organizers after a teacher explicitly models the process. Also, by using an interactive computer format, students will be able to utilize their own prior experiences using similar programs such as Kidspiration and Microsoft Word. And while many students are quick to disengage from paper based graphic organizers, student motivation should be enhanced by the variability induced by interactive graphic organizers. For educators to utilize the interactive tools available on ReadWriteThink, their students need access to the internet. Students are not allowed to save their work on this program so teachers should allow enough time for students to complete and print their graphic organizers. Given the constraints of time and availability of technology, teachers should spend ample time preparing students for this activity. Teachers should decide if their students need to fill out a blank organizer on paper before completing one in the lab. This is especially true for students that need additional scaffolding. In this case, teachers must find ways to adapt a paper version prior to the computer, since they cannot manipulate the digital version on this website. In an effort to assess student performance on these skills, educators should collect the student print outs of their graphic organizers. Teachers will need to assess whether or not students are accurately organizing ideas. In general, these graphic organizers are step- by-step in nature, so teachers can assess where students are struggling by working through the tool with the student. Also, teachers need to model and observe how they use these organizers when writing their drafts. Technology How-To The ReadWriteThink webpage is divided into 4 parts. It has a section with about 700 lesson plans, a second section listing the IRA/NCTA English Language Arts Standards, a third section containing a list of web resources, and a fourth section labeled Student Materials, containing the tools that students may use online. Within the ReadWriteThink website there are lesson plans that can be sorted into K-2, 3-5, 6-8, and 9-12 grade levels. The lesson plans can by seen by clicking on the column title, which seems more useful than the other available methods of sorting by alphabetical order or date of creation. The lesson plans are very complete and well written and you may be able to find the topic or activity you want for your grade level. They vary from simple and basic printouts to very long and complex plans leading to products containing audio and/or video links. The ReadWriteThink web site also has “Web Resources Gallery” which has nearly 700 links to literature lists, professional development information, copyright information, software tutorials, online encyclopedias, dictionaries and all things educational. There are dropdown menus at the top of the list to filter by grade level and by the topics of All Web Resources, Instructional Resources, Professional Development,
  • 5. 5 Reference Library, and Student Resources. By filtering for the grade level and category desired the list will become a more useful size. The most beneficial aspect of this website is the student materials section.. There is a technical support page with downloads for any plug-ins that your browser may need to use the site and there are fifty tools to choose from! Many are specific to organizing a topic or specific literary element or product such as a riddle, poem, postcard, book cover, letter, or fractured fairy tale, but some are tools useful for organizing writing with enough flexibility to fit a variety of purposes. Among these are the Circle Plot Diagram, Comic Creator, Compare and Contrast Guide, Essay Map, and the Webbing Tool. When using the Circle Plot Diagram, students open the tool and fill in the events in their story. The box with the event is then placed onto a diagram with arrows showing the flow of events. The last event in the plot leads back to the beginning event creating a circular plot. The diagram can be used to diagram events in a circular story, such as If You Give a Mouse a Cookie by Laura Numeroff. As a writing tool, it organizes your circular plot story so you are ready to write! The Comic Creator starts with a student choosing one, two, three or six panels. The panels allow the students to choose a background, add a caption to the bottom, and choose characters, dialogue balloons and props to add to each panel. To aid in preparing for this, there is a “Comic Strip Planning Sheet” with blanks for the scene and actions, the caption, the characters, and the props. After planning the comic strip can be created. As with all the interactive pages on the site, students must complete the panels and print before they log off of the site. The Comparison and Contrast Guide does not create one specific graphic organizer, but explains the purpose and organization of a “Comparison and Contrast” paper. It is a tutorial or lesson similar to a PowerPoint that an older student could go through one slide at a time or a teacher could go through with a younger student or students. It presents and explains three strategies for writing a Comparison and Contrast paper: Whole-to-Whole or Block Similarities-to-Differences Point-by-Point tell everything about one item and then everything about the other item explain all the similarities and then all the differences tell similarity or difference for each point or topic, one at a time Introduction Item 1 Item 2 Conclusion Introduction Similarities Differences Conclusion Introduction Point #1 Point #2 Conclusion Students are instructed to cover all the points and keep things in the same order when moving from one step to the next. After explaining the three ways to structure the writing, the guide then suggests three different graphic organizers to choose from. There is a student resource for a Venn diagram with two circles, a Venn diagram with three circles and a Compare and Contrast Chart to organize before writing. There are also lists of transition words for comparing and contrasting and a checklist of “things to pay attention to.”
  • 6. 6 The Essay Map is a graphic organizer with room to actually write a short essay using the available structure of the organizer. There is room to type an introduction, three main ideas (the box will hold nine lines of type), each with three supporting details (three lines of type), and all leading to one concluding paragraph. This tool is a limited in its use, but could be useful for an intermediate age student who has trouble organizing a paper. The last tool described is the Webbing Tool. This tool is a free form tool to create a graphic organizer. The student chooses between using circles or boxes and may create as many as desired, place them anywhere, and connect them in any pattern. All of the tools, with the exception of the Compare and Contrast tool, are simple to use and easy for a student to begin using without any prior practice or instruction. The difficulty would be in making sure that the student has enough time to finish the task and print the product, since there is no way to save the work for a later time. Most of the tools allow for printing an unfinished product which could be completed with a pencil. Except for this lack of ability to save work for completion at a later time, the tools are extremely useful and should be interesting for students to work with. The twelve IRA/NCTA English Language Arts Standards are listed on a page and links are provided to the International Reading Association and the National Council of Teachers of English. The Wikispaces.com page we created is visible to anyone searching the Web and anyone may view or download the lesson plans or use the link to the ReadWriteThink Website. It may be edited by anyone added to the membership, which for now are the three creators. Plans are for the membership to grow as the staffs for various worksites are added. When permission is granted any member may click on the edit button to add or delete content whenever they want. The administrator or manager of the site may not stop members from editing, but can revoke the editing privilege of a member. A manager may also access a saved history of the site to restore the page’s previous content. Recommendations/Future Actions The future action isWe intend to bring back the information learned from the ReadWriteThink web site to our individual schools. Staff members at our schools will be trained to use the ReadWriteThink tool effectively through a staff development meeting. In this meeting teachers will learn how to use the ReadWriteThink site through a web page developed in Wikispaces. Wikispaces is a web site that allows its authors to create simple web pages that groups, friends, and families can edit together. In our Wikispace site, we have shared information learned from the ReadWriteThink web site into an informative web page that explores different strategies on how to help students write with better organization. Once we have shared this information from the Wiki with our staff then the teachers will be able to add or edit information from the Wiki. In this collaborative manner of adding and editing information the Wiki will grow and expand into a bigger web page in which all staff members can enter their knowledge about helping students write with better organization. Conclusion/Reflection Overall, interactive graphic organizers from ReadWriteThink are a compelling tool for writing instruction. These organizers help scaffold student cognitions when
  • 7. 7 writing and enable teachers to effectively model their own thinking about writing. The interactive and technological components of these organizers suit the interests and prior experiences of the modern student. They also enhance student motivation and engagement. Ultimately, teachers need to think about how they would effectively incorporate these tools into their existing writing curriculum. And regardless of the lesson, teachers need to explicitly model the use of these tools for the organizers to be effective. On our team’s Wiki, teachers from our own schools will have access to lesson plans that demonstrate the use of these graphic organizers. Teachers will not only have access to this website, but they will be allowed to edit the Wiki within each individual school. The hope is that teachers will use the graphic organizers from ReadWriteThink and eventually, contribute their own graphic organizer lesson plans to the Wiki. This within school sharing system on the Wiki is designed to increase the efficiency and quality of the existing curriculum by providing school and grade specific lesson plans that demonstrate effective use of interactive graphic organizers. References Colorado Department of Education (1995, July 13). Colorado model content standards for reading and writing. Retrieved June 13, 2007, from Colrado Department of Education Web site: http://www.cde.state.co.us/cdeassess/documents/standards/reading.pdf Collins, A. (2001) Cognitive Apprenticeship: Making Thinking Visible. American Educator, Winter Edition, pp.1-18. Flower, L & Hayes, J. (1981). A cognitive process theory of writing. College Composition and Communication, Vol. 32, No. 4. pp. 365-387. Johnson, S.(2001) Emergence: The connected lives of ants, brains, cities, and software. Toronto: Scribner. Jonassen, D. (1996) Computers in the classroom: Mind tools for critical thinking. New Jersey: Prentice Hall. Keller, J. (1983) Development and use of the ARCS model of motivational design. Enschede, The Netherlands: Toegepaste Onderwijskunde, Technische Hogeschool Twent. (24 pages) March, T. (2006) The New WWW: Whatever, Whenever. Whereever. Educational Leadership, pp.14-19. Prensky, M. (2001) Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants, Part II: Do They Really Think Differently?” On the Horizon, vol. 9, no. 6 (December 2001), pp. 15–24; available from <http://www.marcprensky.com/writing/>. Tapscott, D. 1998. Growing up digital: The rise of the Net Generation. New York: McGraw-Hill.
  • 8. 8 Appendix Our team searched for an interactive tool to address the need for students to improve the organization of their writing. After searching the Web we could only find one site that with truly interactive tool for students, the ReadWriteThink.org Website. We used the tools provided on the site and began sharing our findings by emailing each other and attaching any documents that we were working on. We decided to write a few simple lesson plans, specific to our intended audience, that incorporated the tools provided on the site. We decided to post these to a Wiki where anyone could access them and the three of us would all be able to edit the page. The Wikispaces.com site that we are using will only allow for one “manager” of the page, who has control over who will be allowed to edit the page. Now we are creating three copies of the page so that we will each have control over the membership of our separate pages, so that we may add our building staff or other colleagues to the membership. We would still be able to enlarge or combine the memberships of our pages by sharing with each other as we feel appropriate. Our report was done as a Word document and the Track Changes tool was used to mark the changes we made to the document.