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Grace Blossoms

Reader’s and Writer’s Workshop in Homeschool

How to incorporate Reader's and Writer's workshop in your homeschool classroom in a simple and fun way for everyone.

Reader’s and Writer’s Workshop is a way of teaching Language Arts that is more natural.

Essentially, you’ll read great literature and teach quick lessons. You’ll join reading and writing while building upon your child’s skills.

If you’d like to dig into this concept more, here are some great resources:

Reader’s Workshop

Writer’s Workshop

The following is what you’ll need:

1. Mentor Authors

A mentor author can be any published author that is an example of the lesson you’re wanting to teach.

This allows your children to see how real writers use the skill you’re teaching .

For example, when I pull Ezra Jack Keats The Snowy Day, my plan might be to teach words that make sound and how we put them into our writing.

With words like, “Crunch, crunch, crunch, his feet sank into the snow,” and “Then he dragged his feet s-l-o-w-l-y to make tracks,” and “-a stick that was just right for smacking a snow-covered tree,” and “Down fell the snow-plop!” I’ve got lots of great examples from which to teach.

Choosing a mentor author is powerful.

It allows your child to zoom in on one learning point. It makes him or her feel successful because it’s easy to see how to perform that certain skill. Our students mimic our mentors. It’s easy as that.

2. A Reading Mini-Lesson

You’ll need one small teaching point.

The beauty in workshop is the ability to teach children based on their specific needs.

You can pull from the state standards if you’d like. I have some thoughts on how this can fit in without completely taking over here.

Here’s the key to your mini-lesson: keep it short and simple!

Let’s say I want to teach children how to make a text-to-self connection.

I’d tell them what a text-to-self connection is and then have places marked in the mentor text to show them as we read.

They then try to make a connection to the same text aloud. This will help you assess their understanding.

3. Read Alouds

Reading aloud to children is so important. In your mini-lesson, it’s vital.

After reading about Peter (from the example above) waking in the morning to fresh fallen snow, I can say, “I have a text-to-self connection! I love waking up to find it snowed while I was asleep just like Peter. I can tell he was excited because right after breakfast, he put on his snowsuit and ran outside.“

Never be afraid to stop reading aloud to practice your teaching point. Allowing your child(ren) to attempt this while you’re reading aloud teaches them something important. They are learning how to be critical thinkers as they read on their own.

3. Writing Mini-Lesson

Your reading and writing lessons will come from the same text.

Share something you noticed the author did that’s evidence of great writing.

For example, I’ll point out how Keats used sound words also called Onomatopoeia.

I’ll ask the children to look back in the text to see if they can hunt them down.

We can write them on post-it notes and stick them in our Writer’s Notebook to use as reference for the next part: writing.

4. Lessons in Action

We keep both a Reader’s and a Writer’s Notebook.

If you’d like to learn more about them, this book as well as this book are both great resources.

The Reader’s Notebook is for all our good thinking we do about the books we read.

The Writer’s Notebook is for exploration and growth in our writing.

The only rules for our Writer’s notebook is that it’s a place for trying new things and being brave as writers.

This is not the place for perfection!

We love these simple notebooks for younger children.

And these for older elementary kids.

Whether your child is writing a longer or shorter piece, prompted or free, it write doesn’t matter.

What does matter is they’re practicing what good writers do.

What matters in your Reader’s notebook is that they’re writing what they’re thinking. As you can imagine, this is an amazing tool. You’re able to keep such a good pulse on where your children need support. This also allows you to celebrate their achievements.

Your Role in Notebooks

  • Your own thinking aloud/writing alongside them is huge. Allow yourself to show them how you make mistakes and overcome them. Let them hear how a good reader thinks as he/she reads.
  • Gather their thought process and use it to decide what gaps they have in their comprehension
  • Decide what they need to learn next
  • Writing goals (we usually set one or two per session–see our homeschool schedule here).
  • Finding spelling needs
  • Adding a note for them to prepare for discussion with you about what they’re thinking/learning/wondering.

5. Self-Selected Texts

Choice is key to life-long readers and writers.

After your mini-lesson, your students(s) should be given an assignment to read from their choice book applying the lessons to their Reader’s and Writer’s notebooks from that text.

For example, if I taught sound words for Writing and text-to-self connections for Reading, I would assign the child to make a couple of text-to-self connections to what they choose to read and write about it in their Reader’s Notebook.

They’d then create a story (either prompted or free write) in their Writer’s Notebook to try adding in sound words like you picked out in The Snowy Day story.

Final Thoughts

Take your time incorporating this idea into your homeschool setting.

It can feel overwhelming if you’ve never taught like this before, but give both teacher and student some grace.

You’ll likely see what I did. Students growing in their reading and writing. An enjoyment of the process of learning. The knowledge that you have a great grasp on what your child(ren) know and where they need to go next.

How to incorporate Reader's and Writer's workshop in your homeschool classroom in a simple and fun way for everyone.

Filed in: Schooling • by Andrea •

[jetpack-related-posts]

Our Simplistic Homeschool Schedule

A quick overview of both yearly and daily schedule that's so simple I can't believe we didn't start this as soon as we began homeschool!

Homeschool Schedule

One reason homeschool is so amazing is because you can make it fit your family.

There are so many ways to do it.

I would love to encourage you to take what you can apply from our schedule and leave behind what doesn’t work for you.

Year-Round

We chose year-round schooling because of a belief cultivated from eleven years of being an educator myself in the public school system.

It never made any sense to me how we ever came up with summer break, honestly.

With the huge learning gaps that happen over the summer, it never seemed like the best way to learn.

It also didn’t leave much wiggle room for travel, which is something our family loves to do.

Instead, we homeschool four weeks and then take one week off.

One blissful week every fifth week where we do whatever we want, get caught up around the house, and play games like crazy.

It’s been one of the best things to happen to our school year!

Daily Schedule

We do an every other day schedule where we only learn half the subjects each day.

I decided to do this after reflecting upon my student teaching assignment in a rural public school where we did what they call “block scheduling.”

Basically, we split our learning in half with the ability to dig into the subjects we’re doing each day for as long as we need without feeling rushed.

I plan everything in my high performance planner because I also fit time to write and running my business into our day .

Mondays and Wednesdays we do Math, Science, and Music.

Tuesdays and Thursdays we do Language Arts (Readers and Writer’s Workshop, handwriting, spelling), History/Geography, and Art.

We love it because there’s so much time for the kids to play and experience all the learning that happens outside of books.

This leaves extra time to be outdoors hiking, building, taking lessons in specific sports, or exploring something new to learn.

Fridays

We put our field trip and service days on Friday.

Fridays are good to run to a museum, the zoo, drive somewhere further, or even do some world-schooling long weekends with the whole family.

Simply Put…

We love this schedule.

It’s so relaxed.

It allows time for the boys to really soak up their childhood.

To grow in other areas outside of what books alone can teach them.

It lets them see their books’ material in real life a lot of times.

My favorite part is the ability to seek out unique learning opportunities outside the home.

What’s your favorite homeschool schedule? I’d love to hear about your school day in the comments!

A quick overview of both yearly and daily schedule that's so simple I can't believe we didn't start this as soon as we began homeschool!

Filed in: Schooling • by Andrea •

[jetpack-related-posts]

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