Thursday, April 12, 2018

Article Review: Giving Students the Right Kind of Writing Practice

The authors of the following article (Gallagher and Kittle) discuss the importance of the right kind of writing practice.  They firmly believe the only way to ensure a student improves their writing over time is through practice, and enough of it.  The kind of practice is offered to students makes all the difference.  All too often the practice we give kids in school to write actually may hinder their improvement, and turn them off to writing altogether.  The rote standard practice of writing five paragraphs formula stunts their ability to develop their own voice and "denies them the crucial experience of organizing their thinking." (Gallagher and Kittle, 2018). 
Their answer to what the proper kind of practice looks like in the classroom is creating a unit of writing for a particular genre in loops.  Looping during units presents an opportunity of progress through skills necessary to become stronger writers.   Student's volume of writing will increase, leads to deeper understanding, and increases a student's confidence as a writer.  The article takes you through a sample narrative writing unit.  The first lap focuses on short memories as the writer stays and focuses on one specific moment in time.  Students read lots of mentor texts with the teacher, the teach models and writes with them.  This only takes one week.  During the second lap (one week) students still don't write an entire, but write only about a moment in a story (perhaps just a half a page long).  Still studying numerous mentor texts.  We study and write along side them.  Lap three (three weeks) students are asked to create a series of scenes to tell a story.  Students study the shape of stories and our focus is to look at the skills to build on what they learned during the first two laps.  Focus on endings and look at how expert story tellers craft their stories.  The fourth lap (three weeks) allows the teacher to differentiate instruction for those students who are still struggling with crafting several scenes.  Others who are more advanced begin telling stories "through the lens of multiple narrators", a higher level of complexity. 


I recommend this article to everybody, and perhaps this could help us to organize a scope and sequence, or curriculum map for our writing program.  Let me know what you think.  Could this work in you classroom? 

                                                               

(the article is also available on the Staff Resource Padlet, found here >>> )

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