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Study Driven: A Framework for Planning Units of Study in the Writing Workshop | 
| Author: Katie Wood Ray Publisher: Heinemann Category: Book
List Price: $29.00 Buy New: $26.10 You Save: $2.90 (10%)
Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 197079
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 304 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.5 Dimensions (in): 10.6 x 8.5 x 0.6
ISBN: 0325007500 Dewey Decimal Number: 372.623 EAN: 9780325007502
Publication Date: June 19, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Description
No matter what grade you teach, what state your school is in, and what level of diversity is present in your classroom, students have the right to be shown real-world examples of the kinds of writing they're asked to produce. For Katie Wood Ray, this foundational idea is also the beginning of an important way of approaching rigorous writing instruction. In Study Driven Ray shows you that encouraging students to read closely can improve the effectiveness of your writing instruction. Detailing her own method for utilizing the popular mentor-texts approach, Ray helps you immerse children in a close study of published texts that supports their learning, leads them to a better understanding of the traits of good writing, and motivates them to become more accomplished writers. Ray shows you how to set up your writing workshop to facilitate close study. From grounded understandings to informed practice to supportive resources, she demonstrates: - how to find a rich variety of texts that give students a clear vision of the writing you want them to do
- how to strategically select texts to support whole-class learning as well as individual choice
- how your teaching language gives structure to curriculum development and student learning
- how good planning turns curricular standards and objectives into sensible units of study
- why depth can be a more practical and effective curricular goal than breadth in writing instruction
Study Driven also gives you the ideas and resources for thirty units of study, ranging from genres to punctuation and appropriate across grade levels. Get students into the habit of studying what they read to help them plan their writing. Give them examples of real-world texts as well as the structure, the space, the time, and the guidance to change and grow as writers. Give yourself Study Driven and find out how.
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| Customer Reviews:
A Great Book for Writing Teachers May 15, 2007 24 out of 25 found this review helpful
Why isn't this book more widely read? Wood-Ray offers excellent direction to teachers - at all grade levels - who are seeking to improve the instruction of writing. Her central ideas are: 1.Texts should be used to mentor students to write real things in the ways real writers write. 2.Writing needs to be `studied' and not `taught.' 3.Teachers need to be writers and gatherers of mentor texts, but curriculum can not be determined before the students begin to study. For teachers who want their students to write well, this is a text that lays out options for letting this happen. You'll want to spend a summer reading it and thinking, so that when you return, you'll be ready for superior kind pedagogy. It is rare for a book to speak so compellingly to all teachers, Kindergarten to College, but I believe that Study Driven is the wonderful exception.
inspiration for great writing October 17, 2007 9 out of 9 found this review helpful
This book is one of the most inspiring professional books I have found for teaching writing. Katie Wood Ray continues to grow her theme of teaching writing in a holistic, authentic manner. She helps the teacher find ways to use mentor texts and authors and inquiry of such to give children examples of how to write. In doing so she guides us to make our classroom a true workshop of writers inspiring and helping each other. Her reference lists of potential resources for a variety of writing is wonderful. She also helps us frame our teaching of dry titled writing styles into more realistically named writing. Pursuasive writing becomes commentary and advice writing. Narative text becomes memoir. In doing so writing topics come alive for students and purposeful in real world context. This book has become my primary resource to guide my writing curriculum this year. The book is useful for all grades. Fantastic book!
Excellent Book for Writing Teachers of all Grades June 23, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Excellent, practical, "how-to" to enhance any teacher's writing program. Katie Wood Ray continues where she left off in "Wondrous Words" and expands on the technique of giving students concrete examples of writing styles to emulate and improve their writing skills. We will be using the text for a faculty book group in the fall.
Too Many Possibilities? September 20, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I heartily endorse the premise of Katie Wood Ray's STUDY DRIVEN. She thinks kids should only write what's written in the real world (good-bye 5-paragraph essay, which makes its home in the "unreal world" known as "schools everywhere"). She thinks teachers and kids should study genres together, using the techniques as a guide to their own writing. And she thinks teachers should "write a mile in their shoes" by writing everything they assign, then using their experiences to teach the "process" to the kids (or using the KIDS' experiences to teach the "process" to the kids).
This is all good practice. I was just thrown a bit by the number of bulleted "possibilities" that Ray included. In fact, much of the book seemed to be given over to these "possibilities," none of which are explained in any great depth. I would have preferred more of Ray's personal experiences and greater depth in her case studies.
Nevertheless, if you teach workshop, you might want to check this from the library and take a "survey course" of sorts on the possibilities of study before you, thanks to Ray.
taking writing to the next level October 21, 2008 I'm so blessed to have received this book because I feel like it has opened a new world of teaching and understanding writing. I feel like the author, Ray, is telling me exactly what I want to hear, that it's okay to follow my heart and my curiosity. I'm not used to that. I love her method of developing lesson plans, which she vehemently insists are not lesson plans.
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