Later this week I will be looking at student writing with teachers. I put together the following materials so that we can reference them when we work together and thought perhaps you might find them useful as well.
Writing Exemplars
- Oregon Grade 3 - includes five levels of Narrative, Expository, and Imaginative writing
- Oregon Grade 5 - includes five levels of Narrative, Expository, Persuasive, and Imaginative writing
- Exemplars.com – includes a small sampling of K-4 writing lessons and exemplars (exemplars are found toward the bottom of each page)
- Houghten Mifflin Benchmark Papers – each set shows a range of scores for all modes taught in grades K-5 Houghton Mifflin English. An analysis of each model is also provided.
- Anchor Papers for Emergent Readers
GRADES 6-8
- Oregon Grade 6 – includes five levels of Narrative, Expository, Persuasive, and Imaginative writing
- Oregon Grade 8 – includes five levels of Narrative, Expository, Persuasive, and Imaginative writing
- 6 + 1 Trait Writing Scored Examples
GRADES 9-12
- Ontario Grades 1-8 – the site includes four levels of annotated writing for each grade as well as copies of the assessment rubrics
- New Zealand Curriculum Exemplars – the site includes poetic writing character development and personal experience, as well as transactional explanation and argument exemplars
- Nova Scotia 1-8 Exemplars
- The Writing Site - select a grade level (1-12) and a genre to explore various writing exemplars
- Write Source – grades 1-12 (simple exemplars)
Scoring Guides
The following sites have posted writing scoring guides that you can review and consider as you develop assessments for your district:
- New York State Guide to the Grades 3-8 Testing Program
- Oregon Department of Education Official Scoring Guide, Writing 2009-2010
- Bakersfield Writing Prompts and Scoring Guides K-8 (also includes writing exemplars)
- Missouri Dept. of Education Scoring Guides 3, 7, 11
- 6 + 1 Writing Rubric
- Student Friendly Writing Rubric (MS age appropriate)
- Practice Scoring 6 + 1 Writing Traits





I recently worked with a teacher who decided that whole group instruction was not meeting the needs of her students. She decided to split her students in two groups, but was having trouble splitting herself between the two large groups. We discussed some cooperative strategies that might help her find a balance. Today I am sharing some of the resources I sent her following our discussion. I steered away from Web 2.0 collaborative tools (which was hard for me to do) and focused on providing links that described strategies. I hope you find the following information helpful and would certainly welcome additional strategy resources and links you are willing to share.