Description

Book Synopsis

One-on-one conferences have become a cornerstone in many language arts teachers' elementary classrooms as an effective method to foster individualized student growth. But how do educators make conferences manageable, meaningful and student-driven in the secondary English classroom? In this practical, teacher-friendly text, we consider strategies for managing the logistics of conferencing with 100+ students, and moving the preparation, and direction of conferences from teacher to student. Readers will walk away with specific tools to create, develop, or revise their practice of conferencing leading to greater student ownership.



Trade Review

Conferencing with student writers can empower students to take ownership over their writing, target specific writing goals, and develop practices that will last beyond any given assignment or task. But conferring can be challenging in secondary classrooms, where teachers often work with over 100 students per day. In this book, Matthusen and Abraham offer a long-awaited resource for middle and high school teachers who are committed to holding writing conferences in realistic and sustainable ways. Packed with specific strategies and classroom examples, Conferencing in the Secondary Classroom is a necessary tool for implementing meaningful writing conferences across the school year.

-- Christine M. Dawson, PhD, Director of Teacher Preparation Program at Siena College, author of The Teacher-Writer: Creating Writing Groups for Personal and Professional Growth

Giving effective feedback is one of the most high-impact moves we can make as a teacher. In the English classroom, writing conferences can serve as the best way to give meaningful feedback that will move and empower our writers. But how to do conferences in the middle or high school classroom, when we see over one hundred students a week, and perhaps have never tried this kind of instructional practice? This book will show you the way. Matthusen and Abraham give specific, practical, and authentic guidance so writing conferences are doable and they make a difference in every writer's growth. The authors are public school teachers who speak from experience. They break down all the steps in creating a strong classroom culture for conferring, getting organized, understanding different kinds of conferences, and trouble-shooting along the way. This book shows us how to increase all writer's skills, confidence, and independence so their writing identities thrive. What could be more important as we send them off to be citizens of the world, their voices ready to be heard by the world?

-- Berit Gordon, literacy consultant; author, “No More Fake Reading" and "The Joyful Teacher”

Conferencing is an absolute must-make move of guided inquiry and cognitive apprenticeship approaches to teaching and learning, which is the most powerful way to teach if we care about each student actualizing her full potential, to achieving equity, to teaching in culturally and personally responsive ways. In this book, you’ll be apprenticed into the use of conferences by two great-hearted teachers speaking from the authority of their expansive experience. They know the pitfalls and the productive struggles. And through it they’ve developed tools that make conferencing work for teachers and learners. What’s in it for you? Empowered teaching and deeper and more joyful learning in a culture of deeply interpersonal engagement. I highly recommend this book as a must-make read!

-- Jeffrey D. Wilhelm, Distinguished Professor of English Education at Boise State University; Author of “Reading Unbound: Why Kids Need to Read What They Want, and Why We Should Let Them”

Table of Contents

Foreword- Carl Anderson

Preface

Acknowledgments

Part I: Broader Context & Getting Started

Introduction- Christina Ponzio

Chapter 1: Building a Culture of Conferencing

Chapter 2: Getting Organized and Overcoming the Biggest Hurdles

Part II: Tools & Examples for Specific Types of Conferences

Chapter 3: Before Writing: Brainstorming and Outlining Conferences

Chapter 4: During Writing: Drafting Conferences

Chapter 5: Revision Conferences

Chapter 6: Reflective and Portfolio Conferences

Part III: Reflection

Chapter 7: Challenges, Time Constraints, and Next Steps

References

Speaking Up

    Product form

    £50.40

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £56.00 – you save £5.60 (10%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Wed 17 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Amy Matthusen, Amy Matthusen, Carl Anderson

    Out of stock


      View other formats and editions of Speaking Up by Amy Matthusen

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 1/7/2021 12:09:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781475853704, 978-1475853704
      ISBN10: 147585370X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      One-on-one conferences have become a cornerstone in many language arts teachers' elementary classrooms as an effective method to foster individualized student growth. But how do educators make conferences manageable, meaningful and student-driven in the secondary English classroom? In this practical, teacher-friendly text, we consider strategies for managing the logistics of conferencing with 100+ students, and moving the preparation, and direction of conferences from teacher to student. Readers will walk away with specific tools to create, develop, or revise their practice of conferencing leading to greater student ownership.



      Trade Review

      Conferencing with student writers can empower students to take ownership over their writing, target specific writing goals, and develop practices that will last beyond any given assignment or task. But conferring can be challenging in secondary classrooms, where teachers often work with over 100 students per day. In this book, Matthusen and Abraham offer a long-awaited resource for middle and high school teachers who are committed to holding writing conferences in realistic and sustainable ways. Packed with specific strategies and classroom examples, Conferencing in the Secondary Classroom is a necessary tool for implementing meaningful writing conferences across the school year.

      -- Christine M. Dawson, PhD, Director of Teacher Preparation Program at Siena College, author of The Teacher-Writer: Creating Writing Groups for Personal and Professional Growth

      Giving effective feedback is one of the most high-impact moves we can make as a teacher. In the English classroom, writing conferences can serve as the best way to give meaningful feedback that will move and empower our writers. But how to do conferences in the middle or high school classroom, when we see over one hundred students a week, and perhaps have never tried this kind of instructional practice? This book will show you the way. Matthusen and Abraham give specific, practical, and authentic guidance so writing conferences are doable and they make a difference in every writer's growth. The authors are public school teachers who speak from experience. They break down all the steps in creating a strong classroom culture for conferring, getting organized, understanding different kinds of conferences, and trouble-shooting along the way. This book shows us how to increase all writer's skills, confidence, and independence so their writing identities thrive. What could be more important as we send them off to be citizens of the world, their voices ready to be heard by the world?

      -- Berit Gordon, literacy consultant; author, “No More Fake Reading" and "The Joyful Teacher”

      Conferencing is an absolute must-make move of guided inquiry and cognitive apprenticeship approaches to teaching and learning, which is the most powerful way to teach if we care about each student actualizing her full potential, to achieving equity, to teaching in culturally and personally responsive ways. In this book, you’ll be apprenticed into the use of conferences by two great-hearted teachers speaking from the authority of their expansive experience. They know the pitfalls and the productive struggles. And through it they’ve developed tools that make conferencing work for teachers and learners. What’s in it for you? Empowered teaching and deeper and more joyful learning in a culture of deeply interpersonal engagement. I highly recommend this book as a must-make read!

      -- Jeffrey D. Wilhelm, Distinguished Professor of English Education at Boise State University; Author of “Reading Unbound: Why Kids Need to Read What They Want, and Why We Should Let Them”

      Table of Contents

      Foreword- Carl Anderson

      Preface

      Acknowledgments

      Part I: Broader Context & Getting Started

      Introduction- Christina Ponzio

      Chapter 1: Building a Culture of Conferencing

      Chapter 2: Getting Organized and Overcoming the Biggest Hurdles

      Part II: Tools & Examples for Specific Types of Conferences

      Chapter 3: Before Writing: Brainstorming and Outlining Conferences

      Chapter 4: During Writing: Drafting Conferences

      Chapter 5: Revision Conferences

      Chapter 6: Reflective and Portfolio Conferences

      Part III: Reflection

      Chapter 7: Challenges, Time Constraints, and Next Steps

      References

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