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So I'm really excited tonight about this webinar.
Um, so we've got Matt Glover speaking with us
and, um, I first heard about Matt, actually,
we've been working with the school in Australia
and there's a lady called Lisa Berman,
how I know it's gonna get to watch this other now.
It's very excited about it.
And she's been doing lots of work with Matt,
and she first recommended I check out his books.
I did one of the books I've been reading, um,
and I was a big fan of his work and I was lots
and lots of links with what we're doing with Toolkit,
which is all about getting children
to create their own stories.
Um, there was lots of bookmaking, lots of fantastic stuff
around children's story, children's and developing
and nurturing children's writing.
And Matt's a teacher, um, he was a head teacher.
He's been a consultant over 30 years.
Um, he's an author of many, many books
with a real focus on literacy
and he's been talking all over the world.
It's actually, I think we've had Skype chats
and talks in lots of different countries now already.
So he travels a lot.
Um, and he talks about nurturing writers, early reading
and lots of other stuff.
So I'm really excited about this webinar tonight.
So I'm gonna hand over to Matt in a minute
because I know you want to hear him speak.
Okay. Um, but what we're gonna do is at the end
of the the webinar, we're gonna 10 minutes
where we can throw out some questions.
So when you are typing during, I'm gonna take some notes,
so I've got it all written down here and then Matt can talk
and at the end I can give him all your questions.
So I'm gonna hand over to you now,
Matt, I'll put your present.
Great. Okay. Alright. So thank you so much.
It's really, um, nice to get to have a chance to be able to,
um, talk of care a lot about, um, just in terms of, um,
thinking about how we support, um, young writers.
And really as much as it does writing,
it's really supporting young composers
and thinking about how children compose,
um, language in all different areas.
Um, and so that's where this seems to be such a connection
to, um, the Tale Toolkit work, which is really
what we support children's, um, composing
of language, right?
And so, um, that's what we're gonna think a little bit about
tonight is just, um, how we support children in, um,
composing language, and particularly when
they're making picture books.
Um, but, um, really it carries over this as well.
So there's a couple things that we want to think about,
but um, we think we'll start
is just thinking a little bit about this idea
about, um, composition.
Because whenever we're thinking about supporting young
writers, we have to think about how we them both in terms of
conventions and in terms of composition.
So by conventions we mean grammar and spelling
and punctuation and letter sound, relationships and phonics
and phonemic awareness
and all those things about getting words on the page.
Um, but that certainly isn't enough
and it's certainly not a prerequisite, which is
what sometimes people think is that we have
to have those things in place first, and we certainly don't.
And so, um, we have to be thinking as much about composition
and how we support children in becoming better at composing.
And so if we think about, you know, the easiest way
to think about this difference between conventions
and composition is just to think about, um,
your favorite book that you've read in the last year or so.
Picture yourself reading your favorite book.
My bet is that when you got to the end of that book, none
of you said, ah, I love this book.
Every word was spelled perfectly right?
Um, and it's not that the spelling wasn't
important, no one said that, right?
That's not what made you love it.
What made you love it was really the composition.
It's not that, that the conventions weren't important.
They were, things had been spelled
correctly, punctuated appropriately.
You wouldn't have kept reading, it
wouldn't have been your favorite book.
And at the same time, it's not what made you love it,
what made you love it was really the quality of the writing,
the composition, right?
And it's really in fact how the conventions, the composition
and the content all work together to create meaning
in a piece of writing.
So I certainly care about conventions,
but I care much more about composition is the trickier part
to, um, to teach into.
And it's, um, in many ways the more important part
to support simply
because that's what it's going to help children become, um,
strong writers long term.
The growth that they can do in composition, right?
Is limitless. Conventions end up being fairly limited once
you know how to do those things.
And so to think about this, I think it would just make sense
that we're gonna spend an hour talking about young writers,
that it makes sense to start, um, by looking at at least,
um, one piece of writing here.
I'm start with a young writer.
And so we're gonna start with, um, Kyle, who's three.
And so one
of the nice things about looking at Kyle's writing is
that it helps us think a little bit about the importance
of honoring approximations, right?
And so, um, here's Kyle's book.
So here's Kyle's first page, his second page,
his third page, his fourth page,
and his last page, right?
So just from looking at that, we might be tempted to think
that Kyle doesn't know very much about writing, right?
We might say, well, Kyle knows how
to work across pages in a book,
or he knows how to, um, he knows how to, um, fill up a page.
Um, he knows the different kinds of marks
and shapes on a page.
This isn't one of those books, those rainbow, rainbow,
rainbow, rainbow,
we've all probably seen the rainbow books, right?
They're universal. Um, Kyle knows how
to make different marks on a page.
Um, but the problem is, um, we might think
that's about all Kyle knows about, right?
But Kyle's actually a very sophisticated
writer for the age of three.
But we can only figure this out if we
honor his approximation.
If we say, Kyle, would you read this to me?
Because if we didn't feel there was meaning there,
we wouldn't say, Kyle, would you read it to me?
And as soon as we say, Kyle, would you read your book to me?
Not just tell me about your book
or tell me about your pictures,
but if we say, read your book to me, which communicates
what we believe about what Kyle has done, as soon as we say
that we learn that the Kyle knows much,
much more about writing than we thought to begin with.
So for example, um, if we said, Kyle, what,
um, would you read your book to me?
Here's how Kyle would read his book.
So this is a book about, um, a fire engine, right?
And, um, just a quick side note too.
Um, the words that you're gonna see typed at the bottom
of the PowerPoint slide only show up
on the PowerPoint slide.
Um, I'm, I don't ever take dictation
and write in children's books.
I'll take dictation at other times of the day
for other purposes, but you won't see any adult writing in
any children's, um, books today.
Um, we'll talk a little bit in a little bit about why
that is, but just know right now
that only reason why I have the words typed there is
because I'm too old to remember the exact text
of all these books that I have from all these preschoolers.
If, um, Kyle was here today
and could read his book to you, um,
I wouldn't need, um, the words there.
But Kyle's not here. I can't remember.
So I have to have them typed there,
but they don't show up in his books just on the PowerPoint.
So, um, here's how Cal read his book on one of his readings.
So he was at Fire Engine, here's the road,
no fire engine yet.
Here's more of the road, but still no fire engine.
Here's the fire engine. It has a horn that goes beep beep.
The fire engine starts going slow,
but then goes really, really fast.
Right now,
we know much more about Kyle knows about writing
than we thought to begin with.
So for example, we know that Kyle is focused
and on topic in his writing.
This isn't a book that starts off being about a fire engine
halfway through becomes a book about dinosaurs.
Ends up being a book about going to the park with his mom.
He says, focusing on topic,
which is a universal skill for young writers.
Writers actually at any age.
We talk to first graders about
being focused in their writing.
Seventh graders about being focused in their writing.
My editor talks to me about being focused in my writing.
It's a universal skill that writers need.
We can also tell that Kyle's writing this as a story
and that he's, um, this story stays
basically the same over time.
It changes a a little bit with each reading,
but it's always about a fire engine.
It always starts going slow, ends up going fast.
He's fairly consistent over time.
We learn even more about what Kyle knows about writing,
if you know what we were reading in his class that day.
So we were reading the book Freight Train by Donald Cruz.
We were talking about some of the illustration decisions
that Donald Cruz makes.
How does he show us that the train's moving fast, slow?
How does he show us that it's day or night?
And Kyle has noticed that at the beginning of this book,
there's a couple of pages of track,
but no train, then a couple more pages of track,
but still no train.
And then finally his train comes, right?
That's exactly where his fire engine book comes from.
The pages with the road, but no fire engine.
Yet Kyle has noticed what Donald Cruz has done in his book
and has then tried it out in his own right.
He's noticing techniques that Donald Cruz uses
and then trying them out.
Kyle's reading like a writer at the age of three,
which is another fundamental skill
that writers at any age need to have the ability to notice
what other authors do
and to be able to try it out on their own.
We learned even more about what Kyle knows about writing
if we were to watch him, um, work on this just for a minute.
So let's see if I can switch over here. Yeah. All right.
So we'll learn even more about
what Kyle knows about writing.
Hello? I see that firetruck, huh?
I was just wondering what this book is going to be about
Because I'm gonna write a book about
fast files. That's
About fast ones.
Yeah. The second, the first one is going
to be a slow fire.
The next one is going to be a table that like,
it's going to be really
Fast. Is it gonna be
kind of like how Donald Cruise did it here?
Yeah, kind of like that. Yeah.
Oh, that'll be very interesting because you can do that.
Alright, well if
Oh, all about fire engine.
What's that part? It says all
about Fire engine.
Oh, all about fire engines.
Is that, is those your words there?
Okay. And what's this part?
That's the fire that, that's,
that's the, um, road.
Do you see any fire truck there?
I you said that's the road there?
No. Did he do any fire truck there?
I don't see a firetruck there yet.
Is he not there yet on the road? No. Then
Comes along.
I didn't see a fire engine yet. Oh, I see the road.
Is the fire engine gonna be on this page? No, not yet.
On the fourth page, On the third page
Is slow watching come To fast.
Oh, come fast. Come to That's what I was wondering.
You know, it looks kind of all blurry, doesn't it?
You can hardly even see that it's going so fast.
So just from that little clip, we now know much, much
more about Kyle as Right we know, um, for example, we know
that Kyle is the type of three-year-old
who can plan his writing in advance.
He said right at the beginning, I'm gonna make a book about
slow fire engines and fast fire engines.
And then he actually did that, right?
We can also tell that he has both
pictures and words in his book.
We didn't know that to begin with either.
Um, but now just write words right here. Right?
So he has words up at the top here
and then the rest of that's his picture.
We can't really tell which of the words of the pictures
unless we saw him do it.
But he has both. He has both pictures and words.
He's also very intentional in what he puts on the page.
These are not random marks
that he's figuring out later on what they are.
He's very intentional in what he's putting on the page.
In fact, what he puts on the page
and what he leaves off the page, at one point he said,
Mr. Glover, do you see a fire engine here yet?
I said, no. Is there one there? And he said, Nope.
He's very specific about what he's putting on the page
and leaving off the page.
So think about how much more we know about Kyle now
as a writer than we did to begin with.
Unfortunately when we first saw this page, we now know
that Kyle's the type of 3-year-old
who stays focused in on topic, who can write a story
that stays constant over time.
He uses both pictures and words.
He plans his writing in advance.
He's intentional in what he puts on the page.
And he reads like a writer.
He notices what publish authors do
and tries it out on his own, right?
All of which is much more sophisticated than we would've
thought when we first saw that.
And we would miss all of that if we didn't say, Kyle,
would you read your writing to me?
Right? When we honor his approximation, we can learn much,
much more about what he knows about writing, okay?
But in order to also just the other thing that impacts that,
the other thing that helps us see what all Kyle can do
as a writer is the fact that he's reading this
as a picture book, right?
It's made our, he's made a picture book, right?
By a picture book
that means different things, different places.
I just mean books that have both pictures and words.
But Kyle's made a book,
which is different than if he was writing on a journal page
or on a single piece of paper.
Kyle's making a um, book, right?
Which fundamentally changes the thinking that he's doing.
In fact, the main type of writing that, um, um,
young children will do if we want
to help us think about composing is to think about
how they're making books.
And so I wanna just, um, talk about for a minute why, um,
the main type of compositional writing
that children are doing is, um, in picture books.
And again, I'm making that distinction
with compositional writing versus functional writing.
Functional writing is important. Functional writing is just
the whole idea of getting words down on the page, right?
And so, um, if you make agro your list to go to the store,
right, to go to the market, um, you're not composing
that list particularly, right?
You're not writing a beautiful little lead
to your grocery list
and you're not describing the adjectives
that you're gonna use to describe the re buy or anything.
Um, you're um,
really the only organization is if you're putting it in the
same aisles as the grocery store, right?
That's really the only composing that was on.
It's just getting the words down on the page,
which is completely different than making
really think about the quality of writing
and how we're composing.
In order to think about that than we
have to be making books.
And it's actually not even a book issue.
It's really a stack issue.
So lemme just talk through for a minute why we'd want
to have a stack of text for anything that we're studying
or thinking about in writing.
So there's a couple of reasons.
And this holds true to any grade.
We can think about this with young children.
We have to be thinking about the same thing
with older children as well, um, up through the grades,
really at any grade.
And so what do we'd have to really think about
is this key question in the teaching of writing.
The teaching of writing. At any age we'd have
to be thinking about this question.
What are we reading or studying that's like
what we're trying to write.
So there are two key parts to that question.
The first part is, what are we reading?
What in our stack of text, what are we showing students
as published people of what they're going to be making?
Um, but the skin part of that question is just as important.
That's like what we're trying to write, right?
What that really means is that there has to be an alignment
to alignment between what, um, children are studying,
what we're reading and what they're writing, right?
They have to be making the same thing.
So lemme just give you a couple of examples of this.
Let's go out of the, out of early childhood for a minute.
Let's go up to grade five for a minute.
And if we were in, um, teaching grade five,
I wouldn't have students write reports, right?
Because I have no place to go for a stack of reports.
I'm talking about at least traditional school report
writing, right?
So there's no place really to go for a stack of reports.
I can't go to the local bookstore
and ask for the report section.
I can't go online and find them.
Um, I know teachers said, oh, class,
I found the best report over the weekend.
I can't wait to read it to, there's no place for you to go.
Your school library doesn't have reports. There go reports.
But you could study feature articles.
I studied all time with grad, right?
And we're studying feature articles
or thinking of, I'm using a stack
of published feature articles
that you'd find in
children's magazines and all sorts of places.
And once we have a stack of feature articles,
we can actually study them.
We can do some inquiry into report
or to feature article writing.
We can study the leads, the voice, the word choice,
the structure of the organization.
We can't do any inquiry into report writing
'cause there's no stack to inquire into.
But we can certainly study feature articles.
So now if we take that thinking down
to the primary grades, right?
Young children, um, what do they have the most vision for?
What do four or 5, 6 7 year olds have the most vision for?
They have the most vision for picture books simply
because that's what we read to them most often.
They have a vision for bookmaking.
They don't have a vision for other types of writing.
In fact, that's why this, this issue of vision
is why I can get bookmaking up
and going in anybody's kindergarten class, preschool class,
doesn't matter anybody's class in about 10 minutes at the
beginning of the school year by doing next to nothing.
I do almost nothing. The less I say the better in terms
of the first day of launching books.
And the reason for that is
because they have a vision for bookmaking, right?
They know what books are. Even if you have children who come
to you who have never ever seen a picture book
before in high schools like that
where children have never been in school
before, there's no picture books at home
and literally the first book they've ever seen
is in at school.
Well, if that's the case, then we just wait one week
to start making picture books.
'cause if they've been in school for a week,
they know picture books.
That's the only way to survive the first week of school
with a group of five year olds.
Let's read another picture book to get
through 10 more minutes of this very long day, right?
If they know, if they've been in school for a week,
they know picture books and then they all start making them,
I'd have zero expectations about
what they do in their first book.
And in fact, I don't even know what to start teaching them
until they're in their first book.
Think about how much we know about Kyle as a writer,
just from seeing his writing, from seeing that book.
We know what he can do and what we can nudge him on next.
Well, until a child's making a book,
we don't even know what they can do.
That's gonna be our starting point. It's just
to go make a book and then we can figure out
what comes next.
Okay? Sometimes people will say, Shirley, you graduate out
of picture books by the time you get into second grade.
It's not an issue of graduating out of picture books.
I can show you year five students making very
sophisticated picture books.
The issue is simply what's in your stack of text.
And so it's not really an issue of that.
You have to make books, right?
The issue is that you'd have to have a stack
of published pieces of writing to give children a vision
for what they would be making.
And for the ages we're talking about.
That stack is almost always
picture books with young children.
So that's the main thing we'd be looking at.
Um, there's some other reasons
that we don't have a stack of texts though.
Um, one of the things,
the reason is it impacts their compositional thinking.
Again, composition is the idea of putting things together
to create meaning.
And so whether you're composing with pictures, with words,
with paint, with clay, with music composition, is the idea
of putting things together to create meaning
and compositional thinking is the same across those areas.
So if we want children to become better at composing
with their picture or with their words, we certainly have
to help them become better at composing
with their pictures, right?
And so the compositional thinking children are doing in a
picture book, right?
Impacts the language that they're using
and how they're composing language there as well.
And so, um, we'd have to be, um, thinking about
how we support children in terms of composition.
In fact, it's very difficult to do unless, right?
Um, we can look at how they compose language in other areas,
but from a writing standpoint, we'd have to look at
how they compose language in a picture book, right?
In fact, even just that idea we talked about
before of knowing whether a child is staying
on topic in their writing.
Again, I'm not concerned if they're on topic or not.
If they're not on topic, I'll help them over time.
It's a long-term goal.
But I'll help them start to learn how to stay on topic.
But I'm not concerned if they do or not.
But the issue is, unless they're making
a picture book, right?
I wouldn't even know if they're able
to stay on topic across the pages of a book, right?
It's similar to an oral storytelling, right?
If children, um, when they're telling oral stories,
do they stay on topic, right or not?
Again, I'm not concerned if they're
not, but we can help support that.
And one of the ways would certainly be through bookmaking.
We also know there's stamina
for writing will be much crater.
Children work on a book for much longer period of time,
simply 'cause there's multiple pages there.
And because we're valuing illustrations.
But the other really big reason that we'd want children
to have a, um, to be making picture books, to have a stack
of text, to have a vision for what they're going to make, is
that it's helps them build an identity of themself.
As a writer, we want children to see themselves
as doing the same things that published authors do.
Um, the easiest way I can think about this is with the story
of this 4-year-old Molly.
So I was teaching in Molly's preschool class one day.
We were reading the book, silly Sally by Audrey Wood.
We were talking about how Audrey Wood has both pictures
and words in her book.
And finally after I'm talking about that for a little bit,
Molly, this 4-year-old said, uh, that Audrey Wood,
she's just like me.
She didn't say she was like Audrey Wood.
She said, Audrey Wood just like me.
Because what she was really saying was, yeah, Donald Cruz,
Eric, Carl, me, Audrey Wood, we all make picture books.
That's not just nice, that's not just cute.
That's crucial, right?
Because as soon as you know you're gonna make a picture
book, you start to read picture books differently, right?
As soon as you know it's that way with any type of writing.
If you know you're gonna go write
something, then read it differently.
Think back to your very first year of teaching
and it was time to write your first parent newsletter
and you had never written a letter
to newsletter to parents before.
What's the first thing we all did?
Went down the hall, found some kind veteran teacher,
and got a bunch of their old newsletters.
And when we read their newsletters, we didn't read them.
Looking at it from a content,
reading them like a reader standpoint.
We are reading them like a writer. We are studying.
How do people write those?
Well, it's the same thing with children.
We would want children to be reading picture books,
noticing things that authors do
that they could try out on their own.
So, um, here's the easiest way to think about this.
This just, um, this whole idea of reading like a writer.
The idea of noticing and trying out, again,
as a fundamental skill that writers need, right?
I was just, um, interviewing an author earlier today.
He was talking about the importance of reading
and noticing what other authors do
that he could then try in his own book.
And so here's my all time favorite reading,
like a writer example.
Um, so here's this 4-year-old Isabella.
So Isabella's made this book and I'll read it to you once,
but then I'm gonna go back and show you the reading,
like a writer part, the part where she's noticed
what other authors do and tried it out.
So here's Isabella's book.
So Isabella,
I was building a snowman.
My snowman's finished, it started to rain,
my snowman melted, right?
So your typical 4-year-old kind of book, well you'll see
where hers, um, um, let me go back and read it to you.
And you'll see the reading like a writer part.
So here's how she actually reads this.
It actually goes like this, Isabella,
this is the page you don't read.
I was building a snowman. My snowman's finished, right?
Every time Isabella turns to this page, Isabella says,
this is the page you don't read.
And so here's what she means by that.
Isabella has noticed
that every time her teacher reads a book, she talks about
that title and the author, they talk about, um,
the dedication if there is one.
But her teacher never stops
and reads the copyright information
that shows up in the front of the book.
Yet that's exactly what that is.
That's Isabella's copyright information
that shows up in her book.
Just like in this book right now. Here's the thing.
No one has ever said to Isabella, Hey Isabella,
it'd be really cute if you put some copyright
information in your book.
Right? Her teacher's never mentioned it.
It's the page you don't read.
Her teacher has never said a single thing about the
copyright information, yet Isabella has it in her book.
And the thing is, her teacher is
responsible for that happening.
'cause even though her teacher's never mentioned
that copyright page something we don't care about,
but instead what she has done a hundred times that year was
to say to the class, you know what?
You could be like this illustrator.
You could use more than one color in your illustrations.
Or you could be just like this author.
You could try this out in the book that you're making
over and over and over.
She's helped them develop the habit of mind of noticing
what authors do and trying it out in their own writing
to the point now that they notice all sorts of things beyond
what, um, um, someone's teaching at school.
We see it all the time with preschoolers
who award themselves calcot
medals on the front of their books.
They've noticed it and are trying it out, right?
And of course, if they can notice those things,
then they can notice things
that will also help them become strong proficient writers.
So just one other thing about bookmaking just really quickly
is that then we'd have to think a little bit just about
the logistics of this.
So when we're making books getting booked ongoing early in
the year, um, I'm starting with four to six pieces of paper.
I'll never start with three page pieces
of three page books, right?
Start with four or five, six pages.
Um, the reason I don't start with three page books is
that most people start with three page books
because they want children to write stories
that have a beginning, middle end.
And the thing is, first of all, I'm not starting the year
with story writing, right?
Um, in preschool with three
and four year olds, I'm, I'm not expecting 'em
to ever necessarily write a story.
They certainly may, but it's not the starting point.
Um, and in kindergarten, first, second grade, um,
I don't start the year with story writing either.
We'll study stories later in the year
and we'll study stories with three and four year olds.
It's just, I'm not expecting three
and four year olds that they have to write that anyway.
So I'm not starting the year with stories.
So I don't need three pages.
And even later in the year,
we shouldn't really be teaching beginning, middle, end.
We should be teaching beginning,
middle, middle, middle, middle.
And Kyle and Isabella
and most young children have way more
to say that'll fit on three pages.
Um, I'm also just using full-size paper,
not paper folded over.
If I start to fold paper over smaller size
or smaller than, you know, I start
with just a four paper probably is what you call it.
Um, just regular full size paper
just folded over paper is just too small.
Um, I would presta it because it needs to look like a book
and it doesn't work particularly well with a bunch
of five year olds to say, here the, um, go get the number
of pages you think you're going to need.
Keep them all organized and paperclip together
and we'll staple them at the end.
Instead. It's just much easier
to start with a pres staple book.
And then we teach 'em how to add pages,
take pages out if they have too many or not enough.
It's very flexible. And in preschool with three
and four year olds are generally starting with, um,
unlined paper, um, kindergarten, five, six year olds.
Then we'll start to use lines.
We actually give children a choice between lined to paper
and unlined paper.
Alright? So for all of those reasons, we'd be, um,
I'd be starting with picture books, right?
That that's would be our starting point.
That children would be, um, the primary thing
that they're making in addition to all sorts
of functional writing, all sorts of lists and letters
and cards and all sorts of other things.
But in terms of composing,
we'd be thinking about making picture books.
And again, from a Tales toolkit standpoint is
that those are, um, the stories
that children are creating are books
that they've already made, right?
And then if they've told an oral story,
then one possibility, it doesn't have to be,
but one possibility is
that those stories they're creating could go across the
pages of a picture book.
And when we're doing that, we'd start right away just right
into a picture book, right?
With young children. It needs to be fairly concrete.
And the idea of I'm creating this thing over here
for something I'll write later with five year olds,
they're much more in the moment writers.
So that's why we'd be starting just with picture books.
Here's a book half at it.
And if it's a story they've already told, one
of the possibilities could be
that story could go in their book.
Okay? All right. So I feel like I'm just talking at you.
I feel like we should stop
and have you turn and talk at all.
But just keeping an eye on the clock here
and knowing that we wanna save some time for questions,
just keep, um, keep those questions in mind
and then we, we'll, um,
we'll pause in a little bit for some questions.
Let me just go, um, to, well, let me go to two other,
well, two other big ideas.
I have too many big ideas
where we always have to narrow this down.
Um, I wanna think just for a minute, um, Kate
and I were talking earlier
and we're thinking about, um, this idea about writing
for children or taking dictation.
Um, so, um,
the easiest way I can help think about this practice, um,
and, and the reason that I wouldn't do it,
that I'm not writing for children, right?
Um, it is easy if I just use this little example here
to really explore this idea.
It's about 45 minutes and a video clip.
And to really think through this, I,
today I'm just gonna have to do the quicker version of it,
which worries me 'cause it's an important big idea
that I hate to do.
Um, and justice to write just talking
about it for a few minutes.
But, um, Ali here, who's written this book, um,
wanted words in her book
and she asked an adult to write them for her.
The adult didn't feel quite comfortable writing right on
Ally's book, but then the author adult wrote it down on
another piece of paper and Ally copied it.
And so, um, which is no different than they
have written in Ally's book.
And either situation, Ali's not thinking about doing, uh,
about really how to write the words.
She's just copying no different if someone wrote it for her.
Um, and there's some problems with it as well.
So this is something I would not do.
I don't write in children's books.
Um, if they ask me, um, for words for their books,
I'm not writing them for them.
If, um, they ask me how to spell something,
I'm not telling them how to spell it.
Um, simply 'cause that doesn't help them become a better
speller by just telling them something.
Um, the reasons why I'm thinking that someone writing
for Ally here, writing Arthur's friend go camping is not
particularly beneficial.
So one of the reasons is Ally can't read that, right?
The words in the book don't serve any purpose to ally there.
Even the word go. She's four years old,
even though is not her reading vocabulary at
that point, right?
Nor would we expect it to be the words,
don't me have any meaning to her there, right?
And they certainly have any more meaning than if she had
just written them herself, which she could have easily done.
Um, it wouldn't have looked like this.
She would've written it with random strings of letters,
but would be the same to her, whether someone wrote it
or whether she wrote it in random strings of letters.
And there'd be bigger advantage to her writing it herself.
So first of all, she can't read that.
And the second issue though is it doesn't tell us anything
about what she knows about conventions.
If we wanted to teach her something about spelling
or punctuation or conventions
or whatever, if we wanted
to teach her something about conventions in writing,
what would come next for her?
What would be her next small step?
And the problem is we have no idea
what her next small step is, right?
We have no idea what would come next for Ally
because we don't know what she can do all on her own.
The starting point for figuring out what comes next is
to first look at what can you do all by yourself.
And in this case, we don't know
what Allie can do all by herself.
We know what she can do all by herself
in terms of illustrations.
We don't know what she can do all by herself in terms
of getting words on the page.
So it doesn't give us any information about what Allie knows
or where to support her next.
The bigger problem than that is this actually
represents a massive push for Ally.
This isn't a small next step.
This is actually, this isn't what Ally can do
with a little bit of adult support, which is
where learning takes place.
This is what Ally can do with massive adult support.
Someone doing all of the work for her, right?
And the problem is we don't even know
how big of a push it is.
See, whenever we're teaching,
we always wanna be teaching with a small nudge.
What's the next small step, right?
Um, I'm looking at some of the details to look at things
and looking at how children are developing language.
We're always, it looks like you're think about
and from a language standpoint,
what's the next small step in terms of language?
How would we help them say a little bit more,
a little bit more rich language?
We're not trying to go from here all the way
over to here all at once.
Well, if we try to go from where Ali is, random strings,
letters all the way over to the ie.
Rule in friends, that's about 14 stages
of spelling development down the road.
And we just skipped past all of them.
The problem is we don't even know
how many stages down the road it is,
unless we know what Allie can do.
So we don't know what she can do,
which means then we don't know what comes next for her,
which then leads to inadvertent massive pushing, right?
Writing something conventionally when she's 14 stages behind
that, right?
Here's the, um, the, another problem with it is, um,
in fact even bigger problem is it sends Allie a very mixed
message, right?
We want Allie to have an image of herself, herself
can do the pictures and the words
and what we're communicating if we write for her.
Your words aren't good enough.
You do the pictures, but you need an adult to do the words.
In fact, when I first talked to Ally about her book,
I said, ally, is your book finished?
And she said, no. And I said, why not?
And she said, well, it doesn't have words
on all the pages yet.
And I said, well, are you gonna put
some more words in there?
And she said, no, but I could take it home
and my mom could help me do it.
See her image of, um, herself as a writer is,
she can do the pictures, but needs an adult to do the words.
And the image we'd want her to have is,
I can do the words and pictures.
There's one more way to think about it.
If Allie came up to any of you
and said, I don't know how to draw Arthur,
would you draw all of my um, um, Arthur for me?
Would you draw all of my pictures for me?
Would anyone just turn the page
and say, all right, what do you want me to draw next?
What should I draw on this page?
Lemme, nobody would sit there
and just draw for children, right?
Well, if we wouldn't draw for a child,
why would we write for them?
See, the thing is, if a child said I can't draw something,
we would teach them strategies for how
to draw something they don't know how to draw.
We would teach 'em how to think about shapes, how
to think about parts, how to think about
what color would help convey.
Meaning. We'd think about strategies for how
to draw something you don't know how to draw.
And if a child says, I can't write something,
then our response would be, well, let me teach you
how to get words in your book.
Let me teach you something rather than just doing
it for the child.
And all of that would mean that we have to have an image of
how Ali could put words in her books, right?
Because Ali could put words in her all on our own.
We'd have to just think about those stages
of word making development.
So just really quickly, here are this typical stages
of word making development.
Here's where children start.
They generally start with pictures, but no words. Okay?
This has pictures and words though.
It's Kyle's fire engine book.
We saw the words right up at the top there.
He has both pictures and words.
This page has pictures
and words you just don't know which is the picture
and which is the words people usually think.
The green things at the top are the words.
That's actually his picture.
His words for the orange ones down at the bottom,
you can't tell which is which
to some marks for the pictures.
Some marks are for the words, but that's how easy it is
for children to get words in their books.
Um, from there they start to use scribble writing, right?
Mountain valley writing. Um,
from there children start to use mock letters.
These are things that look like, like letters
but aren't, um, that have letter like forms to them.
Like that's her Madison's name, Madison.
But then she has all these other things down here as well.
From there, children start to use random strings of letters.
And this is a good stage to be in actually,
because at least you're getting a lot
of practice forming letters.
I'm throwing children are writing with random strings
of letters 'cause they're getting a lot
of practice at writing forming letters.
And then when they start to have, um,
letter sound relationships
and they start to use the letters that correspond
to the sounds, they're saying
it's much easier to start to do that.
Or they've already been forming letters for a while, right?
And then from there, children start
to use beginning phonetic spelling.
Here's Reagan writing about her friend McKenzie.
She know there, she knew there was an M at the beginning
and then she knew there's some other things.
So she put a scribble in there.
In fact, here's Ally from Arthur's friends, go camping.
Here's Ally. Um, about five months later in the spring of
that year, writing car, she has a beginning
and ending sound.
This tells us a lot about what she knows about,
um, spelling right.
Arthur's friends go camping, didn't tell us anything.
And even now she's still about 14 stages down the road
or about now, now about 10 stages down the road from the
IE rule in friends.
So for all of those, um,
so Allie could have gotten words in her books.
In fact, that's why I generally want young children
to have words in their books right at
the beginning of the year.
Because the longer they wait to do it,
the harder it'll be to do.
Instead when it's the first day of school
or first week of school, we say, oh, just pretend
to put some words in there.
They're like, oh great. I can
pretend to do all sorts of things.
It's incredibly easy for them to get words in the books.
And then when iwhenever, I want,
I can help them get a little bit better at it.
And it's not my biggest area of focus.
My bigger area of focus is how are they composing the words.
I just don't want them to think that they can't right
when they all can.
And if we're writing for them
or sending them a very mixed message.
So we'll see if there's questions around that.
I hate doing it that quickly.
That's again, the quick version of it.
Um, but I want to think about one other thing
before we see what questions you might have.
And so I wanna just think for a minute about one other key
fundamental idea that impacts young writers.
And it's this issue of choice over and over.
When I was looking at the, um, um, tales toolkit,
information and looking, thinking about all that,
I kept saying, um, all sorts of things
around following the lead of the child, right?
And the, um, importance of child of children's ownership
over their writing and what they're creating,
their ownership over their stories.
And so I wanna, um, think about one of the things
that impacts engagement, um,
and impacts, um, children as writers, especially,
um, boy writers.
Now, not only boy writers, the things I'm gonna talk about
really impact all writers.
Um, children who love writing more reluctant writers,
less confident writers, boys, girls, it doesn't matter.
But there are some boys
who are sometimes a little bit more reluctant writers.
And so these two things will be particularly important
for all children, but especially for any reluctant writers
or low energy, low confidence writers.
And so the first one is choice of topic.
I'm just talk about this one for a little bit just real
quickly 'cause it's something I think, um,
it sounds like you're already thinking a lot about.
I would almost always want, um, well,
young children want them to always choose their topic.
And in school I want them to always choose their topic.
There's a couple reasons why we'd want children
to choose their topics.
Um, one is that it's, um, impacts engagement.
If we tell children what to write about,
if we limit their topics in any way, if we told them
or gave them a prompt or told them what to write about,
we basically would be saying, we don't think,
I don't think you care what you're writing about.
You'd be just as happy to write about my topic
as you would your topic.
Right? And I don't believe that's true.
Children have, um, topics
that they care more about than others.
Um, they have, um, different levels of engagement
with different topics that were so nice
to see people talking about superhero books
and all sorts of things that children are
interested in, right?
Knowing that those will impact
children's energy for writing.
So we certainly wanna be thinking about choice of topic.
Um, we'd also want choice a topic
'cause it doesn't impact what we're going to teach, right?
I can't think of any writing skills dependent on topic.
It's not like we say, well, I can only teach you how
to write a story or I can only teach you how
to use a use dialogue.
If you're writing a story about a time you were scared,
there really aren't any writing that at least I can think
of writing skills that are dependent on topic.
So one's said we'd want children to be choosing their topic.
It doesn't impact what we're going to teach.
We can teach the same skills, the same support in terms
of language they're writing about
the ability to generate topics.
It seems like you all think a lot about supporting children
generating finding stories.
And so finding ideas for stories
or for any type of book
that you're making is an important skill in being a writer.
We'd want. Um, I worry about 10 year olds
who will say, I don't know what to write about.
I can't find a topic, right?
That's often the case because they've gone
through several years of school
where people are giving them topics, right?
Rather than teaching them how to find a topic.
See, the thing is, if a child says, I can't find a topic,
we can't, I can't find something to write about,
our job would be to teach them how to do that.
Which seems like a lot of the work you all are doing is
thinking about how do we help children find ideas?
And so if we give them ideas
that's not teaching them how to do it.
And really nowhere else in school did we do that.
If a fourth grader came up to us
and said, would you do this long division problem for me?
None of you would for you. No.
Instead, you'd be thinking about strategies,
you'd teach them strategies for how to do something.
It'd be the same thing if they can't find a topic, right?
Um, so for those reasons, I would want children
to almost always choose their topic.
There are a couple instances in schools
as children get older that I might limit topics,
but for the most part we'd want them choosing their topics.
Um, but I wanna go to choice of genre for a minute
because that's actually the trickier one to think about.
And one that I'm really curious, um, some
of your all thoughts on this.
Um, and so the way I'm gonna have
to think about this first is just a quick
background and we have to think about that.
There's really two different ways
that children can organize writing, okay?
So if we were to look at a child's book,
there's really two different ways we can organize writing.
One is to organize it as a story or a narrative.
And then children can also organize things, pieces
of writing as lists.
So we could have story books or list books, right?
And so, um, you know, both of these types of books, right?
So for example, um, you have plenty
of stories in your classroom.
There are books about the time something happened, right?
The time Trixie lost her bunny,
the time Peter played in the snow,
the time the owl babies waited for their mom to come back.
Those are all stories.
They have story elements, character setting, plot movement
through time change, right?
Um, there are books about the time
something happened, right?
Um, but um, that's not all the books that you're reading.
Um, a lot of the books you're reading in school, right?
And the type of children book
that children actually make more easily
are list books, right?
A book like trucks with zoom rumble, which just tells you
lots of things about trucks.
It's not even an informational book,
it's just telling you a lot about trucks.
That's this trained book is
one that teaches you lots of facts.
It's organized as a list, you know,
has a little table of content stuff.
Here's the list of all
the things that you're gonna learn about.
Um, so we could organize writing into two broad
categories, stories or list.
Well, here's where this starts to have an
implication on young children.
Then. So let's think about these two young writers,
these two, um, 4-year-old.
So Brian and Tom are in the same preschool class.
Um, they both, um, heard the same writing.
Folks read aloud that day.
They both decided to go to the ring
center and make books later.
Um, they both decided to make books about trains,
yet their books are completely different from each other.
Brian's is a story. It goes like this, a train.
The train goes up the mountain, then it goes down, boom,
boom, boom, crash flat,
the mechanic fixes the train.
Screech, screech, screech, right?
That book is clearly written as a story, right?
It has character setting, plot, moving through time change.
Um, the easiest way is it's a book about the
time the train crashed.
But Brian or um, Tom sitting right next
to Brian also decided to make a book about trains.
Yet his is completely different.
His is organized as a list, right? It goes like this.
This is a diesel engine, this is a steam engine.
Smoke is coming out of the funnels.
This is a steam engine with three wheels.
This is a steam engine with a whistle, right?
His is organized as a list.
We can't say this is a book about the time, right?
It doesn't work. It's not a story.
Here's where this becomes important then.
If Tom thought he had to write a storybook today,
it would've been much harder for him to do.
If Brian thought he had to make a list book,
it would've been harder for him to do.
But when they have choice of what type of books
to make, children will choose the type.
They have more energy for that day, right?
And in fact, if you go into a typical class
of four year olds, uh, where they're,
we've launched a book making.
And if you look at their books at the beginning of the year,
80% or more of the books are list books.
Books that go like this. This is my mom, this is my dad,
this is my brother, this is my sister.
Or even more likely, perhaps this is my mom.
This is a rock, this is Batman, this is a firetruck, right?
Where they're writing, um, random things in there.
Those are list books. And we can help those become much,
much more sophisticated.
I'm not trying to turn them into stories.
Storybook are no better than list books
and list books are no better than story books.
They're just different types of writing.
If you go into a typical class of five year olds, about 60%
of the books are list books rather than storybook.
And, um, first grade, second grade, it's about 50 50.
Stories aren't the easiest thing for all children
to write right at the beginning of the year.
Some children have a lot of energy for story writing,
and if we've supported that, children will do
that as even more so.
But we'd also wanna be thinking about
how are we supporting children and making list books,
which is another type that a lot
of children have much more energy for, which is why I care
so much about this whole idea of choice
of genre right across the grades.
One of the things that I'm thinking about with three
and four year olds and 11
and 12 year olds, when in the year
do they choose their genre?
And when I'm thinking about three and four year olds,
I'd want them to always be choosing their genre right?
As they go up through the grades and we start
to have genre standards, then we'd have,
sometimes we're studying genres,
and then sometimes we're studying other big ideas in writing
where children could then choose their genre.
But if we care about engagement, we'd have
to think about choice of genre because the two are linked.
Children will have more energy
for writing when they have topics they care about.
And children will have more energy
for writing when they have genres that they want
to write in, right?
And it won't be the same for everybody.
Think about all the people who are, um, listening in today.
If I had everybody go write for the next 10 minutes,
I know two things about what would happen.
First of all, all of you wouldn't choose the same genre.
And I also know that you all wouldn't, um, um, none
of you would choose your least favorite genre, right?
Most of you would choose genres that you want
to spend the next 10 minutes with.
It's true for adults, it's true for children.
So absolutely to help students think about stories
as one type of books they could be making,
we'd wanna be supporting that
and doing all those things that you're doing.
In addition to that, we'd wanna be thinking about
how do we support children in making other types of books
as well, especially with those children
where story isn't their primary way
of com of language, right?
Or primary way of composing.
You have some children, your, um, in fact, one
of the things I always end up doing is watching children on
the playground just to see what kind of things they're doing
and to figure out where their entry
points in for writing are.
For some children, dramatic play is a great entry point into
writing, right?
For other children, high interest topics
and writing about things they think they know a lot about
are, is a better entry point.
And for other children writing about experiences
as a better entry point, all children don't have the same
entry point into writing.
And so we'd wanna be thinking about
where those various entry points are,
which entry points might help some children, um,
or be better for some children than other entry points.
And then how we can even use entry points into, um,
other types of writing for children.
And that's why with something like, um, tale, so
certainly would support story writing for children
who are much more natural storytellers
who would also support for children
who aren't as a way of doing that.
But we'd wanna be careful not to think that the only type
of books that students would be making are stories,
which is why we have to be very careful with some
of the language that we use.
So for example, if we go back to Brian for a minute,
if I was looking at Brian's book
and I just, I'd only seen the first page, I wouldn't say,
Brian, would you read your story to me?
Because how can we, how can we tell it's a story
after just one page,
there's no way we could talk to just one page.
Right? Maybe this book goes like this.
Maybe it's a train, a boat, a car, a plane, right?
Um, it might be a list book.
Once we get to this page,
and certainly this page, now I know it's a story,
and then I could switch to the words story.
I can say, oh, read yours. Keep reading your story to me.
Like I'd have to be careful with story language.
Even like, something like saying,
what happens next happens.
Next is story language.
And I wouldn't say to Tom, here, Tom, what happens next?
Nothing happens next. We never see the diesel engine again.
It's not a happening type of book. It's an interest.
It's a different type of book, right?
And so, um, I just have to be careful with my language.
And even as much as I think about this, I always joke
that I had to go through language rehab at one point
to stop calling every book that children are making a story.
Right? Um, even as much as I think about it,
I'll slip every once in a while
and say, use the word story right?
When I don't mean to. Um, that's something
because for the first 20 years
or so out of 30 in education, I called everything a story.
And it's not, I try to be much more precise
with my language now, thinking about this difference
between story books and list books.
So none of that is to take away from story books at all.
I love stories, right?
Um, it's just not the only type of book
that children would be writing or for some children,
even the easiest type of book to be writing,
at least as a starting point.
And I'm certainly not trained to go one to the other.
They're just two separate types, right?
And we can help them both become more sophisticated
and in both types we can support children's language.
All right. So lemme just pause there for a minute.
I think we have about are left.
Um, like I just am rambling here,
so I'm curious if there's other questions.
It's, it's gone dark here since I, since I was last on.
Yeah. Um, no really interesting stuff.
Like if anybody's got any questions, if you start typing now
and then we can throw some of those out to Matt.
Um, lots of really interesting stuff. Matt.
One of the things that um, was really interesting
to me was when you were talking about the, the stack
and talking about the books,
and I think when you said about the teacher
who was sharing books
and the way she was talking about them, like, you know,
when you see these illustrations, these are the kind
of things you can use in your stories.
Like, is there any other examples you've got of that,
of really good ways to talk about the books that you read
with children to get them
to then think about it in their own books?
Yeah, I mean, it's the kind of thing
that we're saying all the time.
I mean, mm-hmm. Um, one of the things we do sometimes, um,
well, a couple things with older students, right?
Not with three and four year olds with older students,
when we're studying a new genre in writing,
we spend the first couple of days of the unit doing nothing
but studying our stack of text.
Yeah. It's hard to go write something new if you don't know
what that type of writing is.
Mm-Hmm. So we start off those, that's two
or three days of just reading like a writer,
of just noticing what authors do.
Yeah. Um, in order to start trying it out, it's hard
to go right in a new genre if you haven't read it before.
Um, a lot of the, um, lessons
that I'm teaching both preschool or in, um, kindergarten
and up, um, are in as in where I'm modeling things
that I'm noticing and then asking, um,
and seeing what children notice.
I mean, the most common question I'm asking children
is what else do you notice?
What else do you notice on this page?
So we're thinking about the types
of things that children notice.
So if we model that,
then it's relatively easy to support that. Right. Yeah.
Yeah. That's good. Um, I just got a comment
through from Amanda and she said that I've just realized
that I say story when children are writing their books.
Um, could you give us some examples of
what we could say instead of story or just book?
Yeah, I would just, I just say book. Yeah.
I mean, if you wanna be neutral in terms
of whether it's a story or a list
or you're not sure what it is.
Mm-Hmm. I would just say, let's read.
I would you read your book to me? Mm-Hmm. Okay.
And if I'm reading Books to Children, if it's a storybook,
then I say, let's read this story.
Yes. And if it's, um, I just never,
I never really used the word language
list book with young children.
It just doesn't roll off the tongue very well.
Say, oh, let's read this list book.
I'm gonna read this list book too.
So I'll just say, let's read this book.
And what I'll, how I'll describe them is I'll say, oh,
this is one of those books that tells
us a lot about something.
Yeah. Right. So a book that tells us a lot about something
or maybe a book that teaches us a lot about something.
Mm-Hmm. All books aren't necessarily,
all list books aren't informational books.
So some of 'em just tell a lot about something, um,
beautiful language to describe something
and other books are teaching about something.
Mm-Hmm. And if I'm never not sure Right.
I just would use the word book
because book is neutral in terms of language.
I can't go wrong with book. Right.
Um, but story means story, character,
setting, plot, all those things.
It means all those things that you all talk about.
Character setting, problem, solution, Mm-Hmm.
Those are stories. Um, just, there's lots of books
that children read
and should hear that are, um, not stories.
So it's not an antis story thing in any way.
I love stories, it's just trying
to be a little bit more precise in my language
because it gets to be confusing for children if we say,
oh, what happens next?
And they're writing an informational
book where nothing is happening.
Yeah, that's true. Um, one
of the really interesting things that I thought came
through right across your presentation was, um,
the fact there was lots of evidence
and information behind the stories
and the books that the children have created.
So I know for example, lots
of teachers will be scribing on work
and writing things down to be able to collect that evidence
that they need.
But actually in terms of the video that you had,
the knowledge that you had about the children,
then it really came across without having to scribe on,
without having to make endless notes that there was a lot
of information there and there was a lot
of evidence just from the stuff that you have.
I dunno if you want to talk a little bit more about that.
Yeah, I certainly, it's not that I'm not writing down
what children are saying, I'm
just cautious about where it is.
Right. So if it's writing for me,
meaning it's really record keeping.
I'm, I'm trying to remember, like I said, I've got thousands
of books of scanned into my computer from young children,
literally probably a thousand
books scanned into my computer.
Well, I can't begin to remember all those. Right.
For individual, I have to have that written down.
And so, but I just don't write it in their book.
I'll write it in my conferring notes.
Um, I know teachers who will put write it on a post-it note
and put it on the back of the page.
Yeah. It's not my favorite strategy,
but I can live with that one.
Mm-Hmm. Any place other than it being
written right on the book.
Really, I just write in my conferring notes.
I just write if it's, if the writing is for me, which
what you're describing is it's for the teacher.
Right. So remember if the write, if the purpose
of the writing is for me, then I'm writing it someplace
where I would access it.
If I'm writing for a child,
then I'd be writing where they could access it.
But I'm clearly saying I'm not writing for the child.
They can write for themselves.
They don't need me to write for them. Yeah. Yeah.
So I just write it somewhere else
and then I've got a record of what they said.
Um, and especially sometimes I'm writing down, um,
each of the versions of what children say.
So one of the things I'm sure happens in your work is
that children are telling stories
and you're writing down what they're saying somewhere,
not in their book, but somewhere.
And as you're writing it down, when they reread their book,
they read it differently and they read it another time
and they read it differently next time.
Right. Mm-Hmm. That young children's books will
change somewhat with each reading.
In fact, it's not really how much they change
or if they change, it's how much do they change.
We have children whose books change in the moment Mm-Hmm.
And then all these little 9, 10, 12 different stages
until they're keeping them absolutely the
same every time they read them.
Yeah. Well, um, so I'm, we'd have
to decide which version am I even writing down.
Right. Because they've revised it, they've written it often.
Every time they reread it, they add a little bit more,
they're revising and starting to say more.
Mm-Hmm. And so if you even decide which version am I writing
down, sometimes I'm writing, um, two different versions down
so I can compare their language from a first reading
and a subsequent reading.
Yeah. Right. But I'm not trying
to cement it too quickly. Yeah.
Just got a message from, uh,
Kelly saying great professional development have definitely
reflected this evening on the powerful message
that Matt has shared with us. Many thanks.
No, my pleasure. I'm so, I hope
this has been helpful. Yeah,
No, it's been very helpful.
Really, really helpful. It's been very good.
So, um, Lizzie said, I think as adults we are quick
to jump in and ask children what's next when they
mark Macon as part of a book.
How do you suggest we approach this with parents
to help them support their children's sense of self writers?
Yeah. I mean, I think one of the things that happens
with parents, I do a lot of parent workshops
and one of the things that often happens is
that parents not knowing any better.
It's not their fault, but they don't realize
that there's something other than letters and sounds.
Mm-Hmm. They think, well, of course we've gotta have letters
and sounds before we can teach them to write.
Well. And that's absolutely not the case.
You could see each of the books that I shared today. Right.
Didn't have, Kyle's the only one that had writing in it. No.
Yeah. I think Kyle's the only one that had writing in it.
Um, and yet they know a lot about writing,
um, a lot about composing.
And so we have to help parents understand this difference
between conventions and composition.
And what ends up happening when I talk to parents about it,
is they don't end up saying, how can I get my
child to be a better speller?
Or how can I get them to write more?
What they end up asking is, how can I get them
to compose better?
And so I think it's incumbent on us to help parents
understand that there's more
to writing than just conventions.
And that the conventions and writing
are actually pretty limited.
Right. 'cause once you can spell, there's not a lot more
to learn once you can punctuate appropriately.
That's about it. The composing part of all
that is limitless.
And so, um, one, the thing
that makes the biggest difference when I'm working
with parents is to show them pieces of writing
that have strong composition in them
so they can start to see that Oh yeah.
As much as I might be thinking
as a parent about what's my child's spelling like,
or how many letters and sounds
or any of those things, I should also be thinking about,
huh, does my child stay on topic?
Do their right list books or story books.
How much does their books stay the same over time?
How are they conveying meaning?
How much detail is in their illustration? How much detail?
I mean, all these composing things that get at the heart of
what you're about with storytelling
and what we're thinking about from a bookmaking standpoint
that end up being the heart of
what Hope children become strong, um, um,
writers who enjoy writing.
Yeah. That's it.
Well, we see often because um, we work a lot
with early years with Tell's toolkit
and the children are very confident to put marks on papers
and to kind of really create their own stories.
And I think as they get older, sometimes
that gets a little bit more restricted with
that need to do it.
Right. Yep. Um, yeah, like, so I,
I just wondered if you've got any kind of top tips on
maintaining that creativity within ideas
and also kind of overcoming that barrier of having to get
that rightness to their writing.
Yeah. I mean there are a couple of,
I mean this is this be another whole hour
on this one, but Yeah.
Um, there are a couple things.
One is we have to help children understand
that we value risk taking.
Mm-Hmm. So as we're sharing writing,
if we're only sharing writing
and highlighting things that are spelled correctly,
as opposed to highlighting risks that children have taken
to spell difficult to spell words
and have misspelled them, then Right.
If we value and celebrate that, right.
It make a huge difference. Children are incredibly adept.
This is Lily, you know, quote from Lily
and Katz about how children are incredibly adept at, um,
making theories about what they think adults value.
And it's easy for us to inadvertently communicate
that we value things being correct as opposed to, um, or,
or that we value conventions as opposed
to also valuing composition and devaluing their thinking.
And so when we talk with children, one
of the things I'm thinking about when I'm conferring
with writers at any age,
'cause I'm working with three year olds
and 12 year olds, is that, um, I have to be thinking about
what were, were my last conferences up
and what's been my bounce over time of
how much have I been talking to you about conventions
or how much have I been talking about composition?
'cause if my last three conferences about conventions,
I certainly am not teaching conventions.
Again, in my next conversation with the child, I'm gonna go
for composition Mm-Hmm.
Um, and so, and I'm gonna actually teach more composition
the conventions just 'cause that's the higher growth area.
Yeah. Yeah. That sounds good.
So, um, I can see that Karen's typing,
so I'm just thinking if there's any more questions
that anybody's got.
Yeah. But we better let Matt go off.
'cause I think you've got a flight somewhere, haven't
You? I do. I've
got a little, I already have my suitcase in the
car and I'm, I'm gonna walk right out the door, so we'll see
what Karen's typing here.
Yeah. Right. Um, so I'd love to answer one more if I can.
Yeah, there we are. We've got it.
Um, I've asked children to read picture books to me
after reading lots of books on demand,
and I find it really encourages reading for themselves,
which is a similar approach.
And their stories are amazing.
And I often comment on their stories a few days later, so.
Yeah. Yeah. But no, it's, it's been really good tonight.
Well, and just real quick, so I'm not,
and as in Karen's comment there, I'm not sure
how much she's talking about them reading their own books
or reading published books,
but another whole area of conversation, another area
of interest is the language children are composing when
they're reading published books, published picture books.
I ask children all the time. In fact,
my day tomorrow will be sent with six
and seven year olds asking them to read books to me
that they're not decoding.
So published books. Um,
and what I'm looking for is where they're using the
pictures, read those books, how are they composing language
and how rich is their language?
And so, and how do we support
that direct connection to your work?
So yeah, absolutely. All the things
that we've been thinking about tonight in terms
of children composing language, language in, um,
their writing applies to when they're composing language,
when they're reading unfamiliar picture books.
It doesn't work the same if it's a familiar book,
but when they're reading unfamiliar picture books,
we're asking 'em to read them with the pictures, um,
rather than the pictures
and words we're asking them to use the pictures to compose.
Um, the language composition skills are the same.
They're slightly different, but
they're the same whole realm.
Mm-Hmm. And I lately have been thinking a lot about it than
watching how children compose language in dramatic play.
And because you'd think that,
and I won't go too deep into this,
but you'd think that how they compose language in writing
and when they're reading unfamiliar books
and in their dramatic play
and in oral storytelling,
that their language levels would line up.
And they don't, there are some children
who will say much more when they're reading a published
book, when they're reading their own writing,
and the child right next to them will say much more in
their book than they would a published book.
And somebody else is using dialogue on the playground, um,
when they're playing superheroes,
but not using dialogue when they're, um,
reading a book or writing a book.
And what we can start to do is
to raise used language composition in one area
to raise the level of composition in another.
So yeah, it's interesting to think so.
Glad you mentioned that. So interesting to think about
that across ranges, across write different realms.
And I think as well, like what you're saying about, um,
children having freedom just to make marks, I think
that gives them a lot more scope to, to create books
that have got a higher language level.
So I think absolutely. People are having
to write those phonetically.
You'd get a lot less. Oh
My gosh. Yeah. No,
that's why they'd have to. Oh my gosh. Yeah.
I mean if we, it's incredibly
easy for children to make books.
It take nothing at all to get them up
and going, making books, but they had
to write everything phonetically right from the start.
No, all they would, we have to wait.
Think about what we'd have to do with Kyle.
Let's just end with this. Think
back to Kyle, who we started with.
If we were gonna wait till Kyle could write all of
that conventionally Mm-Hmm.
We basically have to say, Kyle,
we're gonna ignore your thinking for the next three years
until you have enough letter sound knowledge
that we can read all of your writing.
Yeah. Right. And we wouldn't do that.
That's what you're doing so much
by honoring children's language and their stories.
Right. Because we are valuing their thinking
and their ability to be able to compose
and composing is not dependent on conventions.
Yeah. That's it. Yeah. Brilliant.
Big thank you for coming out to,
and speaking to, I'll say
tonight, but it's not tonight for you.
I think it's the middle of the day. It's,
We have three o'clock here.
But, um, that's it. Yeah. Thank you so much.
I've really enjoyed it.