Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

The Running/Writing Metaphor

I originally wrote this post four or five years ago when I was both coaching and teaching and working at a climbing gym, but I never shared it. I think the metaphor still stands true and maybe one day I'll find myself doing these things again, and hopefully I'll keep my own words in mind.

I am a runner, and I'm proud of it. I'm not intimidated by other runners because I fit into the sport. They won't judge me; they'll see me as a fellow runner. I'm not so confident about climbing. I like climbing, but I don't call myself a climber. I know some of the lingo and I could climb a 5.9 pretty well, but every time I go into the gym, I feel like I'm being judged. I'm not a part of their culture. And so I should remember that feeling with my students when I'm writing. It's a culture as familiar to me as running, but most of them probably feel like I do when I walk into a climbing gym: like people will judge me for not being as good as them or for not knowing what to do when they tell me to "smear." And what would make me feel more comfortable in that culture and what would make my students feel more comfortable in the writing culture is to immerse myself in it daily: practice until I can climb a 5.13, take a lesson on lead, use the vocabulary. If I were to climb on a regular basis, I could call myself a climber. If my students were to write on a regular basis, they could call themselves writers.


As runners, writers, and climbers, we have to practice every day to get better, and we have coaches and teachers who push us through those daily practices and exercises. It was never my goal or dream to be a high school cross country coach, but that's exactly where I find myself now. When I start connecting coaching and teaching writing, it gets me thinking: Would I give my cross country kids random workouts without understanding the physiology of their bodies, the way different workouts affect them, long term consequences, and short-term benefits? No. Why not? Because I don't want to injure them; I want to train them for the appropriate event in the most efficient way possible. I want them to get the most out of each workout so I'm going to ground myself in things like lactic acid buildup, fast twitch vs. slow twitch muscles, and so on. But coaching isn't just understanding the science of running; it's knowing your kids, motivating them, working with them, encouraging them, etc. And so when we go to teach writing it's the same thing. It's studying theories, reflecting on practices, keeping a "running log" of what you've been doing to see what works and what doesn't.



My high school cross country coach never ran, well once he did, but he didn't even make it all the way around the lake for the warm-up lap. This is not how I view coaching and teaching. Once we get our students introduced to the culture of writing, we can't just leave them with a blank page and a pen and say, "Go!" We have to be a part of the training with them, run with them, write with them. But when you get down to it, running can be downright miserable. I know some of those workouts I give my athletes in 90 degree weather or in the freezing cold rain are downright miserable. I know this because I'm out there doing it with them. Sometimes it's just really hard to even motivate myself to go on a run, or it's easier to take the flat route instead of the one with hills. Sometimes I even want to stop and walk. It's the same with writing. When I write with my students, I am reminded of the frustration I feel sometimes, or the joy I get in accomplishing my goals. That's why it's so important to write with our students so that we don’t forget how intimidating a giant hill can be, or how far away three miles seems to be, or how difficult it is to fill a blank page with coherent ideas, or how daunting it seems to write an eight page research paper. They appreciate it too, seeing you suffering with them, and all the while growing yourself as a runner and a writer.

Thursday, October 23, 2014

Revolutionizing Writing Feedback

This is the time of year when my students would be working on research papers. It would be like pulling teeth for some of them, and for others it would be an amazing discovery and learning experience.

My students got better at writing research papers every year. I can attribute that to a few things: 1) I became a better writing teacher. 2) I started to collaborate with my peers and we made a bank of resources, common assignments, and common rubrics. 3) Along with that collaboration, we taught parts of the writing process in every grade from 9-12. 4) I used Google Drive for student work and peer review.

Yet, I have a love-hate relationship with teaching research and writing. I love learning new things, helping students find resources, seeing students discover something new, seeing students improve their writing and critical thinking. However, I dislike the hours and hours I spent nights and weekends providing feedback on thesis statements, outlines, rough drafts, note cards, and final drafts. Using Google Drive last year definitely helped to make this an easier process, but typing comment after comment is terribly time consuming, as any writing teacher would agree. Providing students with valuable feedback is essential to helping them develop as writers, but it just takes way too long. It's as if October and November of my life was nothing but the research process.

And then I found something that would change my life (or at least my social life in October and
November). It's called Kaizena, and it allows you to add voice comments to Google Docs and Presentations. And it does more than that. Here are my favorite things about Kaizena:

  1. You can add voice comments. Now, I don't love my voice, but I can talk a lot faster than I can type. That means more comments in less time. I just might ask my students to bring their headphones to class.
  2. You can tag each highlight. This allows you to connect your tags to your rubric and rate them, or simply give a :) or :( to each tagged skill.
  3. You can preload and attach resources to highlights. Having a problem with run on sentences? Don't tell the student how to fix it, just link to a resource on fixing run-ons.
  4. You can attach resources or comments to tags. So, when half of the students in your class inevitably incorrectly format their MLA works cited page, every time you use that tag, it'll attach the same resource. It can even keep you from repeating yourself if you tell it to attach the same comment as well.
  5. You can color code your highlights. It takes so long to type comments that I always forget to leave good ones, but with the color-coding, I would challenge myself to use all four colors (I would probably make green for the good ones). Students would also be able to quickly see why type of feedback they're receiving.

Here are some other things I would do with Kaizena:
  • Have students leave a voice comment initially about what they want me to focus on when I give my feedback
  • Use Kaizena for peer review, and comment alongside the peer comments
  • Have students do a self-evaluation, highlighting certain parts of the text (either chosen by them or picked by me).
  • Have students reflect on a revision and talk about the changes they made
Here's a short tutorial I made on using this tool. What are some ways you could use this cool tool in your classroom?