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The
Oregon Writing Project at SOU recognizes the primary importance of teacher
knowledge, expertise and leadership. After the Institute, participants
become Teacher Consultants for the Project. Teacher Consultants hold key
roles in the ongoing work of the Project: as instructors and coordinators
of school-year staff development programs, directors of youth programs,
and part-time Writing Project staff members.
There
are many ways for Teacher Consultants to renew their teaching skills and
knowledge base and share their expertise with others. The OWP organizes
writing groups, focus groups, and special projects each year. The topics
for our inservice programs vary in response to current issues and needs.
Opportunities to share best practices
in writing, especially with other teachers:
Initiate or participate in a professional
reading and discussion group.
Attend the TC Reunion in the spring
Write articles for the OWP newsletter or the NWP's Quarterly.
Participate in a teacher-as-researcher group.
Participate in an Advanced Institute.
Coordinate and present an inservice workshop.
Write a book review for the OWP web site.
Share a great lesson plan for posting on the OWP web site.
Present at the NWP Annual Meeting or other conferences.
Coach or mentor another teacher who wants to improve students' writing.
Share writing strategies via a faculty newsletter or list-serve.
Share writing tips, perspectives, information, etc, via a parent newsletter.
Continue work on your writing from the Summer Institute and publish it.
Reinforce that teachers of writing must be writers as well.
Read (or just listen) at a 1st Thursday Teachers as Writers Pot Luck.
Work with OWP Young Writers' Program.
Present at the Summer Institute as a Returning Teacher Consultant.
Participate in the NWP Teacher Exchange by either hosting a teacher-consultant
from another site, or visiting another NWP site to learn from/teach leaders
at another site.
Advise a student-writing group and publication at your school.
Initiate brown-bag lunches circles with colleagues around the topic of
writing.
Provide leadership to professional associations and bring the principals
of OWP with you.
Coordinate demo-lessons in your school so teachers can learn from other
teachers.
Write chapters for a book on pedagogy.
Find a new form of leadership this year and send us your idea!
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