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A Classroom Teacher's Guide to Struggling Writers: How to Provide Differentiated Support and Ongoing Assessment
A Classroom Teacher's Guide to Struggling Writers How to Provide Differentiated Support and Ongoing Assessment Author:Curt Dudley-Marling, Patricia Paugh What do struggling writers really need? The research says they need more of what every student needs: access to high-quality writing instruction. A Classroom Teacher s Guide to Struggling Writers shares a framework for teaching every child that helps you give frequent, intensive, explicit, and differentiated support to students who struggle. — Cu... more »rt Dudley-Marling and Patricia Paugh (coauthors of A Classroom Teacher s Guide to Struggling Readers) draw on a deep, thirty-year research base as well as classroom knowhow. Through observations of master teachers they show how the writing workshop gives you the instructional space to:
motivate reluctant writers through genre, topic choice, and collaboration
determine exactly where writers struggle through ongoing assessment
use assessment to target student needs in your minilessons
provide crucial one-on-one support during writing time and individual conferences
encourage growth in skills and craft simultaneously.
Best of all, A Classroom Teacher s Guide to Struggling Writers illustrates how writing workshop can increase your instructional flexibility. You ll find information to help you guide struggling writers in grades 2 through 6 in areas where they commonly need support, such as planning, fluency, audience, organization, genre, word choice, mechanics, and revision.
What do your struggling readers need? Instruction that provides the support to gain independence the kind of effective, efficient, flexible teaching you ll read about in A Classroom Teacher s Guide to Struggling Writers.
Curt Dudley-Marling is coauthor of A Classroom Teacher s Guide to Struggling Readers. He is a professor in the Lynch School of Education at Boston College, where he teaches courses in literacy and language arts. His research interests focus on struggling readers and writers, the social construction of learning identities, and the potential of high-expectation curricula with low-achieving students. His numerous publications include articles, book chapters, and the Heinemann titles A Family Affair, Living with Uncertainty (winner of NCTE s James N. Britton Award), and Readers and Writers with a Difference, Second Edition.« less