This event is SOLD OUT.
Please call 857-444-1500 x1 to be added to the waiting list.
This webinar will use Zoom. Registration will close at 9am ET on Friday.
Originally scheduled to be onsite in Dedham, MA, this program has been moved online and is scheduled for the same date.
Writing can be a force that advances learning of core knowledge, builds critical thinking, nurtures social-emotional learning, and strengthens overall mastery of all the literacy standards, This online seminar will explore easy-to-implement and time-efficient ways to revolutionize and re-inspire how you teach writing, based in the latest empirical studies and brain research. You will explore an instructional framework that helps students generate fresh insights when they write about what they learn. Learn how to lead discussions in ways that invigorate close reading and deep thinking about texts, the basis of strong writing. Examine ways to teach scaffolding and provide structures for navigating the writing process in collaborative, personalized ways, that won’t curb voice, but will unleash agency in students. Learn how to help your students become more strategic, independent, and goal-oriented writers. Learn simple to use, practical, boots-on-the-ground powerful strategies and free resources that will help your students become more mindful, engaged, and action-oriented writers.
Participants will be able to:
This seminar is applicable for for K-8 teachers, reading and writing teachers, instructional coaches, special educators, psychologists, social workers, speech-language pathologists, and leaders at the school or district level.
Leslie Laud, EdD, supports schools nationally with strengthening their writing instruction. She holds a doctorate from Teachers College, Columbia University, and continues to adjunct teach there. In addition to teaching, she publishes empirical studies in peer-reviewed journals, consults at the district and state level, and presents frequently at national conferences. She has supported state level adoptions of writing process instructional approaches across the United States. She is the author of Releasing Writers (2018) and Using Formative Assessment to Differentiate Literacy Instruction (2012)