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Writing Circles: Enhancing writing 
experiences by providing a cultural 
bridge for literacy communities 
Sherron Killingsworth Roberts, Professor of Language Arts and LIteracy 
Nandita Gurjar, Doctoral Student 
Norine Blanch, Doctoral Student 
UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL FLORIDA
WHAT ARE WRITING CIRCLES?
Workshop Goals 
• Describe the 
process, products, 
and perceptions of 
teacher candidates 
who participated in 
writing circles 
(Vopat, 2009).
Purpose This research 
quantitatively and 
qualitatively 
measures self-reported 
perceptions 
and attitudes of 
teacher candidates 
about authorship and 
writing 
collaboratively.
Rationale for Writing Circles 
• Creating positive and 
effective writers is best 
facilitated by engaging 
in authentic writing 
experiences (Graves, 
1983, 1994; Murray, 
2003)
Rationale for Collaboration 
 Shown to be effective in 
learning to write AND writing 
to learn 
 Provides a cultural bridge 
for communication 
 Researched to be an 
effective technique for 
spawning proficiently 
crafted text (Graham & 
Perin, 2007) 
Are you ready for what the research says?
Deep Research 
You’ll learn to 
love ‘em kid!
Researched Support for Writing Circles 
Why? – shed fear of blank page, build fluency, develop confidence, learn content, explore 
text structures (Vopat, p.2) 
Immediate response from an audience (no waiting for teacher 
comments); affirm the social aspect of writing (human 
interaction and solitary inscription together). Gere, 1987 
Learners expect & enjoy being listened to – builds confidence, 
fluency, joy, and delight - takes writing to the next level – is 
low risk, friendly and supportive (Vopat, p.6) 
Low risk writing is not necessarily low guilty. It means the 
pressure is off; each kid can be successful and take writing risks 
without fear of penalty or failure (p.69) 
Connect with one 
Writing Circles help learners become better writers through a recurrent workshop 
structure that defines an ongoing supportive audience, honors and develops writing 
voice, encourages experimentation and collaboration, and rehabilitates the writing 
wounded through low risk writing experiences (p.6)
Vopat, J. (2009). Writing circles: Kids revolutionize workshop cont. 
 Provide a structure for a neglected part of what kids need to become better writers: 
independent small group collaboration to motivate and support student-directed 
writing (p.8). 
 Frees up the teacher to participate, minilesson and conference-- students can write 
everyday, but need specific supportive responses. Teachers can’t conference one-on-one 
everyday, but kids can with each other. 
 Keys to successful writing circle collaboration: kids feel comfortable writing, sharing 
and discussing; clear guidelines in place; predictable structure; kids understand 
responsibilities; mechanisms and strategies to help kids reach consensus (p.10) 
 Writing circles are seed beds where writing ideas germinate and quality writing grows 
(p.18). 
 Writing circles welcome all kids at their level of writing ability, celebrate that writing 
and help them take their skill to the next level. 
 Writing circles build confidence and is really a reparative activity where students will 
succeed for the first time ever (p.19). 
 Writing circles become publishing circles when their purpose shifts from generating 
drafts to preparing a more fully developed final piece: agent, illustrator, reviewer, 
editor, and author.
Theoretical Grounding in Social 
Learning 
Vygotsky 
Zone of Proximal Development 
Bandura 
 Learn new info and 
behavior by watching 
others. 
 People are intrinsically 
motivated to imitate when filled with 
personal pride, satisfaction, and a sense of 
accomplishment. 
 An individual’s self-perception of writing 
ability is a decisive factor in their 
subsequent writing growth (Vopat, 2009, 
p.19). 
 When people interact with others, 
they more naturally absorb and 
strengthen their knowledge than they 
otherwise might if they were learning 
on their own (Bailey, 2014, p. 18). 
 Social interaction plays a role in the 
development of cognition and 
learning.
Situated Motivation 
 Choice of topic permitted. 
 More persistent and sustained effort. 
 The ideas and comments 
of peers that encourage 
the learner to explore 
ideas further. 
 More willing to emulate peers 
 Obligation to meet the groups’ timelines 
and collaborative goals. 
 Feedback that comes from within the group is typically more powerfully received than 
the teacher/manager’s suggestions for improving manuscripts.
Graham, S., & Perin, D. (2007). Writing next: Effective strategies to improve writing of 
adolescents in middle and high schools 
 Young people who do not have the ability to transform thoughts experiences, and ideas into 
written words are in danger of losing touch with the joy of inquiry, the sense of intellectual 
curiosity, and the inestimable satisfaction of acquiring wisdom that are the touchstones of 
humanity (p.1). 
 National Commission on Writing: If students are to learn, they must write (p.2). 
 Writing well is not just an option for young people; it is a necessity (p.3). 
 “Silent majority” of students lack writing proficiency, but don’t receive additional help (p.3). 
 Collaborative writing is among the 11 elements of current writing instruction found to be 
effective, through a meta analysis of research, for helping adolescent students learn to 
write well and to use writing as a tool for learning. 
 Defined as: the use of instructional arrangements in which adolescents work together to plan 
draft, revise, and edit their compositions. 
 NAEP writing (2002): only 22-26% of students (4,8,12) scored at the proficient level; 72% of 
4th graders, 69% of 8th graders, and 77% of 12th graders did not meet NAEP writing 
proficiency goals. 
 Teaching adolescents strategies for planning, revising, and editing their compositions has 
shown a dramatic effect on the quality of students’ writing. We must explicitly teach steps to 
prewrite, revise, and edit (Graham, 2006) 
 When students help each other with one or more aspects of writing, it has a strong positive 
impact on quality (p.16).
Collaborative writing practices and writing support technologies 
Rachel Rimmershaw 
 Collaboration is a widely seen practice in the workplace – 
“collaborative activities in pursuit of common goals” (p.1). 
 Collaborative writing can be seen as a social process (p.1). 
 The term collaborative writing does not define a commonly-accepted practice. It 
could be two or more people working on one paper, many authors’ names on one 
piece of writing, many individual pieces of writing with collaboration of ideas 
through the writing process.
Empirical Study on Collaborative Writing: What Do Co-authors Do, Use, and Like? 
SYLVIE NOËL & JEAN-MARC ROBERT 
• Writing is a long and complex task and many authors try to shorten the 
production time, lighten their workload, or improve the final result by 
pooling resources (p.63). 
• found that respondents thought a group’s effort resulted in a better 
document than when they worked individually (p.64). 
• Ede & Lundsford (1990), Group writing includes any writing done in collaboration 
with one or more persons with approx. 87% of the documents produced had at 
least two authors (p.64). 
• ADVANTAGES: Getting several viewpoints, using different expertise, reducing 
errors, and obtaining a better, more accurate text (p.65). 
• DISADVANTAGES: Integrating everyone’s writing into a single style, longer 
time to accomplish, dividing the tasks equitably, and a diffusion of responsibility 
(p.65). 
• Sharples et al. (1991), longitudinal partitioning, the work is divided into 
sequential stages, and each stage is allocated to a different person or sub-group. 
In parallel partitioning, the document is divided into sections, and 
each person or sub-group works on a different section in parallel to 
the others. – and thus begins the story of writing circles
Essential Elements of Writing Circles 
Students: 
Name the group 
Choose a writing topic 
Share/respond 
Reflect in WC notebook 
Collaborate to revise/edit/publish 
Teacher: 
 Conducts minilessons +mentor texts 
(craft/management)
Historical Grounding: 
Research on Writing Process 
Donald Murray (1982): 
70% of the time should be 
devoted to prewriting, 
including: 
Choosing a topic (Graves, 
1976; Chandler-Olcott and 
Mahar), jotting ideas in a 
notebook (Fletcher,1996); 
considering purpose 
(Halliday, 1975), audience 
and genre (Langer,1985; 
Hilyard, 1983). 
Graves (2003) calls these 
activities of generating, 
gathering ideas to be 
“rehearsal activities”
? Generating ideas & forming groups 
(Roberts) or 
? Forming groups & generating ideas 
(Vopat, 2009) 
• As a whole, the class generated a list of 10- 
12 possible ideas, & volunteers who were 
passionate about one of the topics formed 
groups. 
• Then, we proceeded to see if we had enough 
people to form a viable group of about 5-7 
seven members.
Invigorating experimentation 
• My students faces grinned 
widely when they noticed 
literature circles on the 
syllabus, 
• because they had been 
exposed to this format in 
earlier coursework. 
• However, when I explained 
the concept of collaborative 
writing through writing 
circles, some faces looked a 
bit nervous. One group 
even named themselves the 
Worry Warts. 
• This presentation attempts 
to tell the story of my 
students evolving as writers 
through a new strategy 
called writing circles.
The Story of Writing Circles - Sherron 
• Generating a stmt of the problem—Find the focus. 
• Writing-go-round! 
• Transitions & guiding sentences 
• Effectively using subtitles 
• Erradicting Empty Words 
• Adding details that breath life into the topic 
• Setting up googledocs 
• Using accurate language aligned throughout 
• Titles* echo, echo, echo… 
• Writing a compelling intro 
• Creating a strong finish 
• Writing a cover letter 
• APA references
Getting started in Writing Circles 
• Vopat did, however, think of practical components 
that I would have overlooked: 
• 1. We need a NAME! 
• 2. We need a folder with pockets for each group! 
• 3. Discuss why you chose this group…
Some helps along the way… 
• Affinity exercise with 
post-its 
• Move to web, 
mindmap, bubblemap, 
outline 
• Avoid intro & concl at 
first 
• Launch in the body, 
assigning parts.
Schedule for writing circles: 
• 5-10 min of minilesson 
• 10-20 min of 
application & planning 
• Teacher walking & 
facilitating process 
• It’s about the 
process!! 
• It’s not about 
product yet!
!
Research Questions for Pilot Study 
1. What shifts in attitudes about authorship 
do teacher candidates self-report? 
2. How do teacher candidates self-report 
their perceptions of themselves as 
authors/writers?
Survey Reflection for Writing Circle 
After a semester of participating in a new pedagogical strategy entitled writing circles (Vopat, 2009), would you mind if I pick your 
brain about your collaborative writing experience? If you choose to volunteer to respond, be assured that your individual answers 
will not be identified, and only aggregate data will be reported. Many thanks! 
1. How would you rank yourself as an author BEFORE this semester began? Circle one. 
5-strong 3-avg 1-weak 
2. How would you rank yourself as an author at the END of the semester? Circle one. 
5-strong 3-avg 1-weak 
3. Please comment on participating in writing circles at the BEGINNING of the semester: What were your perceptions then? 
Does anything stand out to you? 
4. Now, looking back, what was the best thing about joining a writing circle? 
5. What was the least favorite thing about being a member of a writing circle? 
6. How did the experience of writing collaboratively affect your attitude? Your skill? 
ATTITUDE? _____ Positively SKILL? _____ Positively 
_____ Neutral _____ Neutral 
_____ Negatively _____ Negatively 
PLEASE COMMENT: 
7. What have you learned from the process of writing circles? 
8. What will you take from this experience into your future classroom? Or not? 
DEMOGRAPHIC INFORMATION What is your major? ___ ELEM _____ EXED 
Check one: ______ < 25 
______ 26-35 
______ 36-45 
______ 46- 55 
______ 56+ 
Any prior experience as a writer/author? ____ In what ways?________
What shifts in attitudes about authorship do 
teacher candidates self-report? 
Quantitative 
Descriptive Statistics N Mean S.D. Min. Max. 
Self-perception before writing circles 28 3.11 1.031 1 5 
Self-perception after writing circles 28 4.21 .957 3 5 
Chi Square 
Goodness of Fit 
Self-perception 
before writing circles 
Self-perception after 
writing circles 
Chi Square 
Df 
Asymp. Sig 
32.857 
3 
.000 
10.571 
2 
.005
Results: Improvement in Self-Rank 
16 
14 
12 
10 
8 
6 
4 
2 
0 
Self-reported rank as an author after the collaboration 
weak average good strong
EXPLORING 
Self-reported Growth as Authors 
How do teacher candidates 
self-report their 
perceptions of themselves 
as authors/writers?
RELATIONSHIPS 
Qualitative Themes 
IDEAS 
FEEDBACK 
IMPROVEMENT
Value of Collaboration: Themes 1 & 4 
• Ideas/Feedback 
“The best thing about joining a writing circle was having other 
students to turn to for suggestions and ideas. Having 4 heads to 
work is better than one. I was introduced to suggestions I would 
have never come up with on my own.” 
"The best thing was being able to bounce ideas off of other 
people and receive immediate feedback on my writing from my 
peers.” 
“You get feedback on your own writing as well as have others 
build on your ideas to make one big one.“ 
“The best thing was definitely being able to share ideas.” 
“We bounced ideas off each other and blended our ideas 
together to make it work- such as the title.” 
“…… opened my eyes to new ideas and different points of view.” 
"I was able to come up with ideas to share with my group and 
receive positive feedback and working with these ideas to make 
them the best possible.” 
“Getting to collaborate with others, listening to ideas and 
sharing.” 
"Getting other people's insights” 
“Having the opportunity to write with my peers and build upon 
our piece by sharing ideas.” 
“One thing I really enjoyed was how our poem started to come 
together. Every class meeting, we had some new ideas to add or 
delete.” 
16 
14 
12 
10 
8 
6 
4 
2 
0 
Perception of the value of 
collaboration 
Ideas improving 
writing/final 
product 
Relationships Feedback
Theme 2: Improving Writing/Final 
Product 
• "The best thing was definitely being able to share ideas and 
work together as a group to improve our writing.“ 
• "I think the best thing about joining a writing circle was 
seeing the final product put together after the efforts of all 
members.“ 
• "I think it has helped me a great deal to work with others. 
Our project turned out great.“ 
• "Collaboration of ideas. Together, we produced a great 
product.“ 
• "I loved working with my group and felt like my writing 
improved."
The Value of Collaboration: Theme 3 
• Relationships 
"I made a lot of new friends". 
“Working with wonderful, intelligent 
women.” 
“I met new people………...” 
“We got to really know our classmates and 
begin working with each other.“ 
“Having the opportunity to write with my 
peers and build upon our piece by sharing 
ideas.” 
“Working together as a group and learning 
new strategies.” 
“Getting to collaborate with others, 
listening to ideas and sharing.” 
"I loved working with my group". 
"The best thing about joining a writing 
circle was a positive outlook on group work 
and now I have a great appreciation for all 
my group members and all their hard 
work.“ 
"Being able to share your work and get 
feedback from a group“ 
“ I liked interacting with people in the 
class.” 
25 
20 
15 
10 
5 
0 
Collaboration experience 
positive neutral negative
Lessons Learned: Writing Circles 
• Did teacher candidates 
report that they are likely 
to use writing circles in 
their future classrooms? 
• "I have learned more about 
the steps of the actual writing 
process through authentic 
hands on experience in the 
writing circles". 
• "I learned how beneficial it can 
be for my future students to 
have time set aside for them 
to write collaboratively in 
writing circles. Through 
working with other students, 
they are given the opportunity 
to share their ideas and 
examine new ones“ 
• I will implement writing circles 
in my class to build writing 
ability and confidence in my 
students.
ANY 
QUESTIONS? 
Writing Circles: 
Enhancing writing 
experiences by 
providing a bridge 
for literacy 
communities
References 
Bailey, P. J. (2014). Veteran elementary teachers collaborating in professional learning 
communities: a phenomenological study. Educational Doctoral Theses, Paper 172. Retrieved 
from: http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20004962 
Bandura, A. (1977). Social learning theory. Englewood Cliffs, NJ; Prentice Hall. 
Bernhardson, S. (2011). We are currently preparing students for jobs that don’t yet 
exist… Retrieved from: ctworkingmoms.com 
Bogard,J.M., & McMackin, M.C. (2012). Combining traditional and new literacies in a 
21st century writing workshop. The Reading Teacher, 65(5), pp. 313-323. DOI: 
10.1002/TRTR01048. 
Commeyras, M., & Sumner G. (1996). Literature discussions based on student-posed 
questions. The Reading Teacher, 50, 262-265. 
Daniels, H. (2002). Literature circles: Voice and choice in book clubs and reading 
groups. Portland, ME: Stenhouse. 
Ede, L. S., & Lunsford, A. A. (1990). Singular texts/plural authors: Perspectives 
on collaborative writing. LA Arts & Disciplines. Carbondale, IL: SIU Press. 
Edmonds, W.A., & Kennedy, T.D. (2013). An applied reference guide to research 
designs: Quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods. Berleley, CA: Sage Publications. 
Galda, L., & Beach, R. (2001). Response to literature as a cultural activity. Reading 
Research Quarterly, 36, 64-73. 
Graham, S. & Perin,D. (2006). Writing next: Effective strategies to improve writing 
of adolescents in middle and high school. Washington, DC: Alliance for Excellence in 
Education.
IES (2012). Teaching elementary school students to be effective writers. What 
Works Clearninghouse. Retrieved from: http://ies.ed.gov. 
Kim, H., & K.S. Eklundh (2001). Reviewing Practices in Collaborative Writing. 
Computer Supported Cooperative Work. New York, NY: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 10, 
pp. 247- 259. 
Lee, A., & Boud, D. (2003). Writing groups, change and academic identity: 
Research development as a local practice. Studies in Higher Education, 28, 18.7-200. 
Murray, D. (2003). A writer teaches writing. 2nd ed. Boston,MA: 
Wadsworth Publishing. 
Myhill, D., & Jones, S. (2009). How talk becomes text: Investigating the concept of 
oral rehearsal in early years’ classrooms. British Journal of Educational Studies, 57(3), 265- 
284. Doi:10.111/j.1467-8527.2009.00438.x 
National Commission on Writing (2002). 
Noel, S., & Robert, J.M. (2004). Empirical Study on Collaborative Writing: What 
Do Co- authors Do, Use, and Like? Computer Supported Cooperative Work 13: 63–89. 
Paris, S.G., & Turner, J.C. (2014?). Situated motivation. In Student motivation 
cognition and learning. Google Books. Retrieved from: books.google.ca. 
Peterson, R., & Eeds, M. (1990/2007). Grand conversations: Literature groups in 
action. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann. 
Pintrich, P. R., Donald R. Brown, D. R., & Weinstein, C. E. (1994). Student 
motivation, cognition, and learning : Essays in honor of Wilbert J. McKeachie. pp. 213- 228. 
Hillsdale, N.J. : Lawrence Erlbaum.
Posner, I.R. & R.M. Baecker (1993). How People Write Together. 
Readings in Groupware and Computer-Supported Cooperative Work: Assisting 
Human-Human Collaboration. San Mateo, CA: Morgan Kaufmann, pp. 239-250 
Reed, C.J., McCarthy, & Briley, B. (2002). Sharing assumptions and 
negotiating boundaries. College Teaching, 50, 22-26. 
Rimmershaw, R. (1992). Collaborative writing practices and writing 
support technologies. Instructional Science. Volume 21 (1-3), pp 15-28. 
Tompkins, G. (2012). Teaching writing: Balancing process and 
products. Fresno, CA: Pearson. 
Vopat, J. (2009). Writing circles: Kids revolutionize 
workshop. Portsmouth, NH: Heineman. 
U. S. Department of Education (2008). 
Zinsseer, W. (2010). The life changing message of On Writing Well is: 
Simplify your language and thereby find your humanity. Retrieved from: 
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Aler writing circles 11.1.14 adults

  • 1. Writing Circles: Enhancing writing experiences by providing a cultural bridge for literacy communities Sherron Killingsworth Roberts, Professor of Language Arts and LIteracy Nandita Gurjar, Doctoral Student Norine Blanch, Doctoral Student UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL FLORIDA
  • 2. WHAT ARE WRITING CIRCLES?
  • 3. Workshop Goals • Describe the process, products, and perceptions of teacher candidates who participated in writing circles (Vopat, 2009).
  • 4. Purpose This research quantitatively and qualitatively measures self-reported perceptions and attitudes of teacher candidates about authorship and writing collaboratively.
  • 5. Rationale for Writing Circles • Creating positive and effective writers is best facilitated by engaging in authentic writing experiences (Graves, 1983, 1994; Murray, 2003)
  • 6. Rationale for Collaboration  Shown to be effective in learning to write AND writing to learn  Provides a cultural bridge for communication  Researched to be an effective technique for spawning proficiently crafted text (Graham & Perin, 2007) Are you ready for what the research says?
  • 7. Deep Research You’ll learn to love ‘em kid!
  • 8. Researched Support for Writing Circles Why? – shed fear of blank page, build fluency, develop confidence, learn content, explore text structures (Vopat, p.2) Immediate response from an audience (no waiting for teacher comments); affirm the social aspect of writing (human interaction and solitary inscription together). Gere, 1987 Learners expect & enjoy being listened to – builds confidence, fluency, joy, and delight - takes writing to the next level – is low risk, friendly and supportive (Vopat, p.6) Low risk writing is not necessarily low guilty. It means the pressure is off; each kid can be successful and take writing risks without fear of penalty or failure (p.69) Connect with one Writing Circles help learners become better writers through a recurrent workshop structure that defines an ongoing supportive audience, honors and develops writing voice, encourages experimentation and collaboration, and rehabilitates the writing wounded through low risk writing experiences (p.6)
  • 9. Vopat, J. (2009). Writing circles: Kids revolutionize workshop cont.  Provide a structure for a neglected part of what kids need to become better writers: independent small group collaboration to motivate and support student-directed writing (p.8).  Frees up the teacher to participate, minilesson and conference-- students can write everyday, but need specific supportive responses. Teachers can’t conference one-on-one everyday, but kids can with each other.  Keys to successful writing circle collaboration: kids feel comfortable writing, sharing and discussing; clear guidelines in place; predictable structure; kids understand responsibilities; mechanisms and strategies to help kids reach consensus (p.10)  Writing circles are seed beds where writing ideas germinate and quality writing grows (p.18).  Writing circles welcome all kids at their level of writing ability, celebrate that writing and help them take their skill to the next level.  Writing circles build confidence and is really a reparative activity where students will succeed for the first time ever (p.19).  Writing circles become publishing circles when their purpose shifts from generating drafts to preparing a more fully developed final piece: agent, illustrator, reviewer, editor, and author.
  • 10. Theoretical Grounding in Social Learning Vygotsky Zone of Proximal Development Bandura  Learn new info and behavior by watching others.  People are intrinsically motivated to imitate when filled with personal pride, satisfaction, and a sense of accomplishment.  An individual’s self-perception of writing ability is a decisive factor in their subsequent writing growth (Vopat, 2009, p.19).  When people interact with others, they more naturally absorb and strengthen their knowledge than they otherwise might if they were learning on their own (Bailey, 2014, p. 18).  Social interaction plays a role in the development of cognition and learning.
  • 11. Situated Motivation  Choice of topic permitted.  More persistent and sustained effort.  The ideas and comments of peers that encourage the learner to explore ideas further.  More willing to emulate peers  Obligation to meet the groups’ timelines and collaborative goals.  Feedback that comes from within the group is typically more powerfully received than the teacher/manager’s suggestions for improving manuscripts.
  • 12. Graham, S., & Perin, D. (2007). Writing next: Effective strategies to improve writing of adolescents in middle and high schools  Young people who do not have the ability to transform thoughts experiences, and ideas into written words are in danger of losing touch with the joy of inquiry, the sense of intellectual curiosity, and the inestimable satisfaction of acquiring wisdom that are the touchstones of humanity (p.1).  National Commission on Writing: If students are to learn, they must write (p.2).  Writing well is not just an option for young people; it is a necessity (p.3).  “Silent majority” of students lack writing proficiency, but don’t receive additional help (p.3).  Collaborative writing is among the 11 elements of current writing instruction found to be effective, through a meta analysis of research, for helping adolescent students learn to write well and to use writing as a tool for learning.  Defined as: the use of instructional arrangements in which adolescents work together to plan draft, revise, and edit their compositions.  NAEP writing (2002): only 22-26% of students (4,8,12) scored at the proficient level; 72% of 4th graders, 69% of 8th graders, and 77% of 12th graders did not meet NAEP writing proficiency goals.  Teaching adolescents strategies for planning, revising, and editing their compositions has shown a dramatic effect on the quality of students’ writing. We must explicitly teach steps to prewrite, revise, and edit (Graham, 2006)  When students help each other with one or more aspects of writing, it has a strong positive impact on quality (p.16).
  • 13. Collaborative writing practices and writing support technologies Rachel Rimmershaw  Collaboration is a widely seen practice in the workplace – “collaborative activities in pursuit of common goals” (p.1).  Collaborative writing can be seen as a social process (p.1).  The term collaborative writing does not define a commonly-accepted practice. It could be two or more people working on one paper, many authors’ names on one piece of writing, many individual pieces of writing with collaboration of ideas through the writing process.
  • 14. Empirical Study on Collaborative Writing: What Do Co-authors Do, Use, and Like? SYLVIE NOËL & JEAN-MARC ROBERT • Writing is a long and complex task and many authors try to shorten the production time, lighten their workload, or improve the final result by pooling resources (p.63). • found that respondents thought a group’s effort resulted in a better document than when they worked individually (p.64). • Ede & Lundsford (1990), Group writing includes any writing done in collaboration with one or more persons with approx. 87% of the documents produced had at least two authors (p.64). • ADVANTAGES: Getting several viewpoints, using different expertise, reducing errors, and obtaining a better, more accurate text (p.65). • DISADVANTAGES: Integrating everyone’s writing into a single style, longer time to accomplish, dividing the tasks equitably, and a diffusion of responsibility (p.65). • Sharples et al. (1991), longitudinal partitioning, the work is divided into sequential stages, and each stage is allocated to a different person or sub-group. In parallel partitioning, the document is divided into sections, and each person or sub-group works on a different section in parallel to the others. – and thus begins the story of writing circles
  • 15. Essential Elements of Writing Circles Students: Name the group Choose a writing topic Share/respond Reflect in WC notebook Collaborate to revise/edit/publish Teacher:  Conducts minilessons +mentor texts (craft/management)
  • 16. Historical Grounding: Research on Writing Process Donald Murray (1982): 70% of the time should be devoted to prewriting, including: Choosing a topic (Graves, 1976; Chandler-Olcott and Mahar), jotting ideas in a notebook (Fletcher,1996); considering purpose (Halliday, 1975), audience and genre (Langer,1985; Hilyard, 1983). Graves (2003) calls these activities of generating, gathering ideas to be “rehearsal activities”
  • 17. ? Generating ideas & forming groups (Roberts) or ? Forming groups & generating ideas (Vopat, 2009) • As a whole, the class generated a list of 10- 12 possible ideas, & volunteers who were passionate about one of the topics formed groups. • Then, we proceeded to see if we had enough people to form a viable group of about 5-7 seven members.
  • 18. Invigorating experimentation • My students faces grinned widely when they noticed literature circles on the syllabus, • because they had been exposed to this format in earlier coursework. • However, when I explained the concept of collaborative writing through writing circles, some faces looked a bit nervous. One group even named themselves the Worry Warts. • This presentation attempts to tell the story of my students evolving as writers through a new strategy called writing circles.
  • 19. The Story of Writing Circles - Sherron • Generating a stmt of the problem—Find the focus. • Writing-go-round! • Transitions & guiding sentences • Effectively using subtitles • Erradicting Empty Words • Adding details that breath life into the topic • Setting up googledocs • Using accurate language aligned throughout • Titles* echo, echo, echo… • Writing a compelling intro • Creating a strong finish • Writing a cover letter • APA references
  • 20. Getting started in Writing Circles • Vopat did, however, think of practical components that I would have overlooked: • 1. We need a NAME! • 2. We need a folder with pockets for each group! • 3. Discuss why you chose this group…
  • 21. Some helps along the way… • Affinity exercise with post-its • Move to web, mindmap, bubblemap, outline • Avoid intro & concl at first • Launch in the body, assigning parts.
  • 22. Schedule for writing circles: • 5-10 min of minilesson • 10-20 min of application & planning • Teacher walking & facilitating process • It’s about the process!! • It’s not about product yet!
  • 23. !
  • 24. Research Questions for Pilot Study 1. What shifts in attitudes about authorship do teacher candidates self-report? 2. How do teacher candidates self-report their perceptions of themselves as authors/writers?
  • 25. Survey Reflection for Writing Circle After a semester of participating in a new pedagogical strategy entitled writing circles (Vopat, 2009), would you mind if I pick your brain about your collaborative writing experience? If you choose to volunteer to respond, be assured that your individual answers will not be identified, and only aggregate data will be reported. Many thanks! 1. How would you rank yourself as an author BEFORE this semester began? Circle one. 5-strong 3-avg 1-weak 2. How would you rank yourself as an author at the END of the semester? Circle one. 5-strong 3-avg 1-weak 3. Please comment on participating in writing circles at the BEGINNING of the semester: What were your perceptions then? Does anything stand out to you? 4. Now, looking back, what was the best thing about joining a writing circle? 5. What was the least favorite thing about being a member of a writing circle? 6. How did the experience of writing collaboratively affect your attitude? Your skill? ATTITUDE? _____ Positively SKILL? _____ Positively _____ Neutral _____ Neutral _____ Negatively _____ Negatively PLEASE COMMENT: 7. What have you learned from the process of writing circles? 8. What will you take from this experience into your future classroom? Or not? DEMOGRAPHIC INFORMATION What is your major? ___ ELEM _____ EXED Check one: ______ < 25 ______ 26-35 ______ 36-45 ______ 46- 55 ______ 56+ Any prior experience as a writer/author? ____ In what ways?________
  • 26. What shifts in attitudes about authorship do teacher candidates self-report? Quantitative Descriptive Statistics N Mean S.D. Min. Max. Self-perception before writing circles 28 3.11 1.031 1 5 Self-perception after writing circles 28 4.21 .957 3 5 Chi Square Goodness of Fit Self-perception before writing circles Self-perception after writing circles Chi Square Df Asymp. Sig 32.857 3 .000 10.571 2 .005
  • 27. Results: Improvement in Self-Rank 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 Self-reported rank as an author after the collaboration weak average good strong
  • 28. EXPLORING Self-reported Growth as Authors How do teacher candidates self-report their perceptions of themselves as authors/writers?
  • 29. RELATIONSHIPS Qualitative Themes IDEAS FEEDBACK IMPROVEMENT
  • 30. Value of Collaboration: Themes 1 & 4 • Ideas/Feedback “The best thing about joining a writing circle was having other students to turn to for suggestions and ideas. Having 4 heads to work is better than one. I was introduced to suggestions I would have never come up with on my own.” "The best thing was being able to bounce ideas off of other people and receive immediate feedback on my writing from my peers.” “You get feedback on your own writing as well as have others build on your ideas to make one big one.“ “The best thing was definitely being able to share ideas.” “We bounced ideas off each other and blended our ideas together to make it work- such as the title.” “…… opened my eyes to new ideas and different points of view.” "I was able to come up with ideas to share with my group and receive positive feedback and working with these ideas to make them the best possible.” “Getting to collaborate with others, listening to ideas and sharing.” "Getting other people's insights” “Having the opportunity to write with my peers and build upon our piece by sharing ideas.” “One thing I really enjoyed was how our poem started to come together. Every class meeting, we had some new ideas to add or delete.” 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 Perception of the value of collaboration Ideas improving writing/final product Relationships Feedback
  • 31. Theme 2: Improving Writing/Final Product • "The best thing was definitely being able to share ideas and work together as a group to improve our writing.“ • "I think the best thing about joining a writing circle was seeing the final product put together after the efforts of all members.“ • "I think it has helped me a great deal to work with others. Our project turned out great.“ • "Collaboration of ideas. Together, we produced a great product.“ • "I loved working with my group and felt like my writing improved."
  • 32. The Value of Collaboration: Theme 3 • Relationships "I made a lot of new friends". “Working with wonderful, intelligent women.” “I met new people………...” “We got to really know our classmates and begin working with each other.“ “Having the opportunity to write with my peers and build upon our piece by sharing ideas.” “Working together as a group and learning new strategies.” “Getting to collaborate with others, listening to ideas and sharing.” "I loved working with my group". "The best thing about joining a writing circle was a positive outlook on group work and now I have a great appreciation for all my group members and all their hard work.“ "Being able to share your work and get feedback from a group“ “ I liked interacting with people in the class.” 25 20 15 10 5 0 Collaboration experience positive neutral negative
  • 33. Lessons Learned: Writing Circles • Did teacher candidates report that they are likely to use writing circles in their future classrooms? • "I have learned more about the steps of the actual writing process through authentic hands on experience in the writing circles". • "I learned how beneficial it can be for my future students to have time set aside for them to write collaboratively in writing circles. Through working with other students, they are given the opportunity to share their ideas and examine new ones“ • I will implement writing circles in my class to build writing ability and confidence in my students.
  • 34. ANY QUESTIONS? Writing Circles: Enhancing writing experiences by providing a bridge for literacy communities
  • 35. References Bailey, P. J. (2014). Veteran elementary teachers collaborating in professional learning communities: a phenomenological study. Educational Doctoral Theses, Paper 172. Retrieved from: http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20004962 Bandura, A. (1977). Social learning theory. Englewood Cliffs, NJ; Prentice Hall. Bernhardson, S. (2011). We are currently preparing students for jobs that don’t yet exist… Retrieved from: ctworkingmoms.com Bogard,J.M., & McMackin, M.C. (2012). Combining traditional and new literacies in a 21st century writing workshop. The Reading Teacher, 65(5), pp. 313-323. DOI: 10.1002/TRTR01048. Commeyras, M., & Sumner G. (1996). Literature discussions based on student-posed questions. The Reading Teacher, 50, 262-265. Daniels, H. (2002). Literature circles: Voice and choice in book clubs and reading groups. Portland, ME: Stenhouse. Ede, L. S., & Lunsford, A. A. (1990). Singular texts/plural authors: Perspectives on collaborative writing. LA Arts & Disciplines. Carbondale, IL: SIU Press. Edmonds, W.A., & Kennedy, T.D. (2013). An applied reference guide to research designs: Quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods. Berleley, CA: Sage Publications. Galda, L., & Beach, R. (2001). Response to literature as a cultural activity. Reading Research Quarterly, 36, 64-73. Graham, S. & Perin,D. (2006). Writing next: Effective strategies to improve writing of adolescents in middle and high school. Washington, DC: Alliance for Excellence in Education.
  • 36. IES (2012). Teaching elementary school students to be effective writers. What Works Clearninghouse. Retrieved from: http://ies.ed.gov. Kim, H., & K.S. Eklundh (2001). Reviewing Practices in Collaborative Writing. Computer Supported Cooperative Work. New York, NY: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 10, pp. 247- 259. Lee, A., & Boud, D. (2003). Writing groups, change and academic identity: Research development as a local practice. Studies in Higher Education, 28, 18.7-200. Murray, D. (2003). A writer teaches writing. 2nd ed. Boston,MA: Wadsworth Publishing. Myhill, D., & Jones, S. (2009). How talk becomes text: Investigating the concept of oral rehearsal in early years’ classrooms. British Journal of Educational Studies, 57(3), 265- 284. Doi:10.111/j.1467-8527.2009.00438.x National Commission on Writing (2002). Noel, S., & Robert, J.M. (2004). Empirical Study on Collaborative Writing: What Do Co- authors Do, Use, and Like? Computer Supported Cooperative Work 13: 63–89. Paris, S.G., & Turner, J.C. (2014?). Situated motivation. In Student motivation cognition and learning. Google Books. Retrieved from: books.google.ca. Peterson, R., & Eeds, M. (1990/2007). Grand conversations: Literature groups in action. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann. Pintrich, P. R., Donald R. Brown, D. R., & Weinstein, C. E. (1994). Student motivation, cognition, and learning : Essays in honor of Wilbert J. McKeachie. pp. 213- 228. Hillsdale, N.J. : Lawrence Erlbaum.
  • 37. Posner, I.R. & R.M. Baecker (1993). How People Write Together. Readings in Groupware and Computer-Supported Cooperative Work: Assisting Human-Human Collaboration. San Mateo, CA: Morgan Kaufmann, pp. 239-250 Reed, C.J., McCarthy, & Briley, B. (2002). Sharing assumptions and negotiating boundaries. College Teaching, 50, 22-26. Rimmershaw, R. (1992). Collaborative writing practices and writing support technologies. Instructional Science. Volume 21 (1-3), pp 15-28. Tompkins, G. (2012). Teaching writing: Balancing process and products. Fresno, CA: Pearson. Vopat, J. (2009). Writing circles: Kids revolutionize workshop. Portsmouth, NH: Heineman. U. S. Department of Education (2008). Zinsseer, W. (2010). The life changing message of On Writing Well is: Simplify your language and thereby find your humanity. Retrieved from: williamzinsseer.com

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. Is this our title? SATURDAY NOV 1 2:00- 250/ NOW 3:20 PALM BREEZE SALON 2
  2. From our blurb: analogous to lit circles and based on constructivist theory and collaborative learnnig models WRITING CIRLCE PROVIDED A CULTURAL BRIDGE FOR COMMUNICAITON WERE IMPLEMENTED IN A LARTS COURSE ALONG WITH WEEKLY MTG RELEVANT MLESSONS PRELIMINARY RESULTS SHOWED A STRONG MAJORITY PERCEIVED WR CIRCLES AS A POSITIVE COLLABORATIVE EXPERIENCE LEADING TO SUBSEQUENT PUBLICATION.
  3. in much the same way that I form lit circles after giving book talks.
  4. Tried so many different paths to effective writing instruction: writing workshop, minilessons, modelling, and drafting…. But we just
  5. Bring folders, post its, actual journal FELJ
  6. There are /it is /qualifiers
  7. titles
  8. Insert survey s;;;