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01-01-2001 12:00 AM
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-23-2008
- Posts 0
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There can be no doubt that when the writing portfolio is removed from assessment, student writing will deteriorate. We assess what we value; if writing is no longer assessed, the instructional time now spent teaching students to become proficient writers will instead be spent on a subject area that IS part of the assessment. As teachers,we all know, if it's not assessed, it's not taught. Yes, students will still have to write, but focused instruction on the tools and strategies good writers use will just become one more thing we "don't have time for anymore" because it's not on the test! More than any other subject area, students must call upon their writing skills daily throughout their academic careers,as well in their adult workplace. The level of student writing in Kentucky has increased dramatically since the writing portfolio was introduced. It's not perfect, but it's what keeps writing instruction in the classroom. Without it, we would return to the days of writing assignments, not writing instruction!
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-23-2008
- Posts 0
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Disagree with Those who Disagree
Those who believe that writing will deteriorate, I cannot disagree with you more. I am a second grade teacher in Kentucky, and writing is not assessed in my grade. I teach writing and teach it well. Moreover, writing is still required for the ORQ's and on-demand. The need to provide three polished pieces really isn't necessary. It is time-consuming when you consider that there are 28 kids, each with three pieces to polish (write, type, revise, conference, revise, conference, revise, conference, revise...) when the teacher could be teaching more skills to the entire class or teaching small groups skills they're having difficulty with instead. Most fourth graders have not acquired the ability to *effectively* revise and edit their own pieces like middle and high school students have. It is still a developing skill. The stakes are high for teachers to have kids who perform well, and this is one area that they have control over, so the conferencing and revising is unending until the day they are due. The stress that accompanies writing portfolios is unfair and unnecessary. I taught fourth grade for six years until they were able to hire someone fresh out of college to take my place because nobody in our school wanted to teach fourth grade and only the ones desperate for employment would take it. The teachers who find themselves in fourth grade must remain until someone will take their place and relieve them. Trust me, the pros of eliminating portfolios in fourth grade will far outweigh the cons.
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