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Creativity and Technology Transform Georgia Students' Writing Skills
Cherokee County School District Students Conquer State Writing
Assessment, Create Winning Grant Proposal After Practice With
WriteToLearn
CHEROKEE COUNTY, Ga., and BOULDER, Colo. - Oct. 14, 2008
- When Denise Lewis' language arts students at Woodstock Middle School
in Georgia were struggling with writing, she addressed the problem with
creativity and a new Web-based learning tool. Within weeks, improvements
in her eighth graders' writing skills were so compelling that they wrote
a proposal for a technology grant that reaped a $1,000 award for their
school. By the spring, nearly all of Lewis' students had passed the
state writing assessment.
The transformation followed Lewis' adoption of Pearson's award-winning
Web-based writing and reading comprehension learning tool,
WriteToLearn™, and the purchase of laptop computers for her
classroom by technology-forward Cherokee County School District.
"The difference was like night and day," she said. "The
kids were running to my classroom to get on WriteToLearn."
With WriteToLearn, students practice essay writing and summarization
skills, and their efforts are measured by Pearson's state-of-the-art
Knowledge Analysis Technologies™ (KAT) engine. The KAT engine is a
unique automated assessment technology that evaluates the meaning of text
by examining whole passages, not just for grammatical correctness or
spelling.
With WriteToLearn, Lewis guides her students in developing writing
strategies, which they immediately apply with WriteToLearn.
"They can actually see that what I'm teaching them will work, which
is otherwise difficult to do, especially with the struggling
writers," Lewis said.
With every WriteToLearn assignment, students are eager to see the
feedback they receive and are more engaged in what they're learning,
she continued. "They work and work to get the best possible
feedback, and they're very competitive."
For the grant-writing project, the students conducted research, created
surveys, interviewed each other and even made a movie that showed them
using WriteToLearn. "They learned that they have the power to write
for a purpose," she said.
This year, Lewis is teaching seventh graders at all skill levels, and is
finding that WriteToLearn is effective at differentiating instruction to
make it more personalized for each student. "It works for
everyone - from our writers who need extra help to our high-achieving
and gifted students."
At another Cherokee County school, F. D. Johnston Elementary School,
sixth-grade language arts teacher Jeff Pence doesn't hesitate to
acknowledge that using WriteToLearn has changed his life.
"I spend my time teaching writing instead of drudging through
papers," he said. "WriteToLearn changes the attitudes of
teachers because grading papers was killing us."
With teaching six classes a day of approximately 25 students per class,
Pence was previously only able to assign and grade about three writing
prompts during the entire school year. Now, he assigns as many as two
writing prompts per week, "and by Friday afternoon, they are both
in the gradebook for all my classes," he said. "My students
get so much practice with WriteToLearn - something I never could have
given them on my own."
Pence points out that the best part of WriteToLearn is how it motivates
his students. "My students absolutely eat it up," he said.
"Wow - it's a great time to be teaching."
Pat Kearns, Ph.D., the district's director of academic standards,
professional development and career pathways, said, "Cherokee
County School District boasts a team of creative, talented teachers who
have found ways to use technology, such as WriteToLearn, to ensure that
all of their students achieve at the highest level. When I visit
classrooms around the district, I am amazed at the new enthusiasm for
writing that I see when students are practicing with WriteToLearn."
More information about WriteToLearn is available at www.WriteToLearn.net.
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