Friday, February 2, 2018

Assignment Three: Share Your Writing Life

Chapter 3: Share Your Writing Life
• Write together as a staff
• Note your writing practices
• Tell students why you write

Chapter Two of Regie’s book segues right into her third chapter, “Share Your Writing Life.” In this chapter Regie drives home the importance of teachers sharing their writing process with their students. She encourages teachers to become writers in front of their students, on their own and with their staff, and also to share their daily writing practices with their students. The purpose of the assignment below (Assignment #3) is to get you writing.

 
ASSIGNMENT THREE: Sharing Your Writing Life!
For many of us, writing is not enjoyable and/or is very difficult. Perhaps it is because we ourselves were never celebrated as writers. Or perhaps we only remember the “skills” based comments written in various colored pens on our papers…that always sliced deep (and turned many of us into “non-writers.”) These comments never really helped our writing become any better. As a requirement of a summer writing institute (which I was conned into attending “so that I could become a better teacher of writing”) I (Jackie) bit the bullet and wrote extensively throughout the course. What they say is true: the more I wrote, the more I enjoyed it, and I believe I grew as a writer. The goal of this two-part assignment is to get you writing.

Part One:
For the first part of this assignment you need to think about topics for your own writing (ideas/stories that you can share to excite your students) and then actually write a short piece (ideally in front of your students.) If you do not presently have the opportunity to write in front of your students then please complete the activity on your own.

1. Use the topic idea list from Regie’s “Try It and Apply It” on page 26. Choose several topics, and then create a list of sub-topics for each.

2. Choose the sub-topic that most interests you and write a short piece that you can use to model writing in front of your students.

Part Two:
1. On pages 45-46, Regie gives suggestions for writing exercises for the start of school (or really anytime you need to get writing started.) Follow her criteria for “Capturing A Moment” (from the summer or any other time ) and draft a short piece. Follow the directions in the chart on page 46.

2. After completing the draft, which should take no more than 10 minutes, take a moment to write down some of your observations of your writing process. Again, use the suggestions from the chart or the bullets below:

o What are you thinking about as you are composing?
o What exactly did you do to plan, to get started writing, when you got stuck, or when you completed your piece?
o What does your process look like? Do you write straight through? Stop to re-read? Revise as you go? Look up information? Edit?

The goal of this activity is to get you to write - which will hopefully get you more comfortable writing in front of your children! Complete this activity and let us know how it went by sharing your answers to some of the bulleted questions above.

Please post your comments to the course blog. (We don’t need to see your writing piece. We are more interested in your thought process as you completed the exercise.)

2 comments:

  1. Part One
    What We Worry About- (First day of school, Trying Something New, Making New Friends).
    Our Favorite Places- (Summer trips, A Place I Once Visited, My Best Trip Ever).
    A Day We’ll Never Forget- (Riding My Bike, Learning to Read, When I Met my Best Friend).
    What We Worry About
    Before the start of every school year I am worried. Yes, I am a teacher and I get nervous before the first day of school. Every year, I wonder what my class will be like, will they be nice and if they will like being in my class. I feel like many of my students on the first day.
    The night before my first day of school I have trouble sleeping. I often toss and turn and worry about all the things that could go wrong. I am afraid of many things, all which never come true. I come to school the first day tired from lack of sleep.
    My first few moments in the classroom before my students arrive I worry that I have forgotten to have something important, though I haven’t. I am worried I don’t have everything ready to start off “on the right foot”, although I do.
    While the first day of school goes on my worry melts away. I make new friends and see special qualities each student brings to our classroom. Every year, after our first day of school I wonder why I worried so much. It has always been a special day.
    Part Two
    When I stepped onto the beach, I immediately took my shoes off. I wanted to feel the sand between my toes and the heat under my feet. I had been waiting for this moment every day since I planned our trip many months ago. The sun on my face, the sound of ocean waves in my ears and the hot sand beneath my feet was what I had been waiting for. It had been a tough Winter, our area where we live experienced an unusual amount of heavy snow and freezing rain. Several weeks over the Winter we had been snowbound and unable to leave or home. Our road too icy and unplowed to escape and we were frequently stuck. When the Spring finally had arrived we’d experienced a higher than normal amount of rainfall and everything was wet and muddy. By the time Summer had arrived I was ready. I was ready for warmth again and to feel it on my skin. I felt like my soul had come alive again when I stepped onto the hot, bright beach that day. I felt like everything was going to be ok. I had arrived and was warm again, even in my soul.
    Observations of my process:
    1. When I was composing, I tried to relax and not worry about wordage. It was actually enjoyable. I tried to create a picture and a feeling for my reader. I was actually feeling the moment from my memory.
    2. I did not plan much except to think of a moment I truly enjoyed last Summer and tried to recreate the feeling. It was pleasant to just write and tell myself I’ll go back later and revise….just to write.
    3. In my process I wrote straight through and did not stop until I felt I was done with my thought. It was then I went back and reread and revise.

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  2. I love your topics! Isn't it interesting to think about how we actually right and how many teachers spend so much time having students brainstorm, web, list, pre-write, etc...

    We want to bring the joy back to writing and make it an enjoyable process!

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