Join us for the Network Connect session Term 3 2022
A key goal of the Think Forward Writing Network is to open a conversation about writing in the classroom, using research, trialled techniques, assessment and data collection.
Join us for our Term 2 2022 Network Connect Discussion !
DISCUSSION BLOG POST IS HERE!
In this free, dynamic Professional Learning and Networking opportunity we will delve into the big ideas in writing as well as the incremental small steps that you can use in your classroom every day to make a difference to your students.
Let’s share expertise, discuss best practice, learn from each other!
What do you most hope to get out of this session? Let us know when you register?
Collaborate
This is a growing space to increase your knowledge, bridge the gap between research and practice, and hear the narratives of other educators achieving great things in the teaching of writing.
Connect
Join the movement of schools interested to improve their writing instructional practice and assessment.
Join the Writing Network
Sign up is quick and easy. We’d love to hear from you!
Read the blog posts from convenors Jeanette Breen Nathaniel Swain and continue the discussion.
We want to offer educators the opportunity to explore the science behind all the threads that bind together to create a rich writing framework. We want to provide you with practice that will set your students up to be successful writers and creators of quality text.
We look forward to sharing a space for collegiality, curiosity and quality writing practice.
Do you accept that correct sentence structure is the building block of quality writing? Then you possibly have entered into a journey with grammar that feels like a road map of rules, terms, symbols and arrangements that are blasting cognitive load. While we know to teach grammar in context, we have to also understand that parts of grammar are sequential. We advocate for taking the time in your writing scope and sequence to focus on small aspects of grammar, cement it in working memory, practice it, retrieve it and then drop in opportunities for reference or application among all the other moments when students are writing. Read more and come along to writing network discussion!