Saturday, March 15, 2014

MACUL Blog Post


I attended several sessions at this year’s MACUL Conference. Among them were talks by Andy Schoenborn, a special needs teacher at Mt. Pleasant High School, and Karen Chichester, who teaches at Monroe Jefferson High School and the Eastern Michigan Writing Project (http://goo.gl/OrrtXo). Schoenborn’s talk, “Fostering Authentic Writing Through Digital Feedback,” was about fostering authentic relationships with one’s students. Authentic relationships, argued Schoenborn, means connecting with students on a social-emotional level, e.g., greeting them at the door, shaking their hands, or calling them by name. He began his session with an opening writing exercise. He asked his gathered audience of about two dozen or so to spend 2-3 minutes writing about their writing experiences at high school – that is, as a high schooler. He then asked the gathered audience of younger-looking practitioners to turn to their neighbors and spend a few minutes pairing-and-sharing before asking for volunteers to share what they had discussed. This was, presumably, his way of modeling how to foster “authentic” relationship in the classroom. Moving on to his PowerPoint, Schoenborn then shifted to scales of concerns: the global and the local. For Schoenborn there are both global (macro) and local (micro) problems with how students write, ranging from problems with thesis, structure, and analysis to problems with sentences, formatting, diction and/or grammar. Hoping to unlock door to “authentic writing,” he provided “five key things” that teachers should be doing when providing effective digital feedback: (1) read through the entire piece before inserting comments; (2) focus comments on patterns or representative strengths and weaknesses; (3) use a respectful tone and search for what is right and effective; (4) ask questions and respond as a reader, not an evaluator; and (5) personalize final comments using two positives and one suggestion. He then provided a “feedback template,” encouraging his gathered audience of teachers “to focus on the piece, not the person.” Finally, he concluded with some ways in which to foster authentic writing through digital feedback. Among them were: personal peer editing, e.g., Google Docs; revision history, which allows for self-reflection; group essays, which creates collaboration; embedded rubrics, which builds consistency; and reflective learning blogs, which is a good way to check for understanding over time.