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Craft Lessons Teaching Writing k-8. Ralph Fletcher JoAnn Portalupi By: Danielle Mossoian & Stephanie Lukas. Introduction: Guide for a Clean Outhouse .
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Craft LessonsTeaching Writing k-8 Ralph Fletcher JoAnn Portalupi By: Danielle Mossoian & Stephanie Lukas
Introduction: Guide for a Clean Outhouse • “This pamphlet is your guide to quick and easy outhouse cleaning. Your sparkling, fresh-smelling outhouse can be the envy of all your neighbors. Guests will remark that your privy is the best that they have ever visited. If you want to hear all sorts of wonderful things about your outhouse, read the following pages carefully and enjoy with the author’s compliments…” • By: Marnie Wells
An Introduction should: • Explain your purpose for writing it • State the main ideas that will follow • Get your reader interested
You Tube Video • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWZIrS-Y3Mo
Guide for a Clean Outhouse • Section one: When Is My Outhouse Dirty? Your outhouse is always dirty, however, the untrained privy-cleaner needs to know what t o look for. Listed below are some signs of a dirty outhouse. One the ceilings:(insects including) ants, spiders, daddy-long-legs, wasps, hornets, mosquitoes, termites, etc. (signs of insects including): cobwebs, eggs, nets, excrement, etc. On the seat area: empty beer/soda cans etc. On the floor: sticks, pine-needles, hemlock needles, leaves, mouse turds, dead animals, dirt, sand, toe-jam and any of the things listed under “On the ceiling” or “On the seat area.” Now that you know the signs of a dirty outhouse, let us proceed to the second section…
Add Detail: • Be specific • Don’t assume • Don’t leave anything important out
Craft Lessons: Differences • Revised & Updated • New Literature • New lessons • Qualities of Writing- index (p.173) • Organized more user friendly • Table of contents revised • Listed by subject vs. alphabetically
Time • In order to shoot a basket you practice, practice, practice • Writers need to write • Write on a regular basis • Regular sustained time • Helps develop craft
Response-Conferring Tips: • Respond first as a reader: content, meaning, emotional force. • Laugh when it’s supposed to be funny • Be puzzled when it’s confusing • Be positive • Try to understand the writer’s intention-listen • Help students solve their own problems • “How might you go about fixing this?” • Lower your ambitions: write frequently, and teach no more than one or two things in each piece
Responsibility • All ages have decisions: • Paper • Begin with picture or words • Who I want to read • Topic • *Grow into independent writers*
Writers Notebook • Collect ideas, thoughts, artifacts, fragments of dialogue etc. • Blank pages= safe, no judgment zone • Experiment with elements of craft • Always ‘invite’ never ‘assign’- lose purpose
Literature • Stories, songs, and poems: internalize language and structure to help craft writing of their own • Home environments: different • Serve as their guide for living in that word with the wide-open eyes of a writer
Using Literature with student writers: • Select a wide range of literature • Read aloud frequently- helps build community • Reread regularly- notice more writers craft • Make time for students to talk their way into an understanding of the text: • Start with open ended question: “what do you think” • Ask if they have any questions • Restate their response, “so you think…” • **Students need to understand what’s written before understanding how the author has used craft**
Using Literature with student writers: • Use specific language to talk about craft: avoid vague language • Teach your students to read as writers • Ask, “what is something this writer is doing well?” • Connect back to the students writing • Linger longer in selective texts: return to it again and again. Constantly find craft lessons. • Use picture books for all level learners- short to read and re-read. Focus on topic with length of time to write