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Why Write?. Presented by Marcia Baxter South Carolina Virtual Charter School. Everyday writing. Take a minute and think about all of the writing you have done today. 21 st Century Writing. Today’s writing takes many different forms… Emails Text messages Tweets Blogs
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Why Write? Presented by Marcia Baxter South Carolina Virtual Charter School
Everyday writing • Take a minute and think about all of the writing you have done today.
21st Century Writing Today’s writing takes many different forms… • Emails • Text messages • Tweets • Blogs • Social network pages • Thank you notes • Personal cards/notes • Journal writing
And it often involves a different language… • LOL • OMG • Thx • K • IDK • POS *(MOS or DOS) • BBFN
But…writing is still assessed in school • Learning to write to a prompt for school assessments is still important. • South Carolina currently assesses student writing in grades 5 and 8 and on HSAP. • Each grade level will have one extended-response item and 25 multiple-choice items which assess the writing domains of content and development, organization, voice and conventions. • The extended-response item is based on a 15 point rubric.
Types of Writing • The narrative • tells a story • The persuasive • tries to convince the audience • The descriptive • describes something • The expository or explanatory • gives information or explains something
The Writing Process • Prewriting • Drafting • Revising • Editing • Publishing
Prewriting • Pick a topic or read the prompt given • Think about what you are writing and who will read it. (This is often stated in the prompt…for example “Tell about a special time with family and friends” • Brainstorm ideas. Make lists. Collect details about the topic. • Make a web or outline. • Use a graphic organizer.
Draft • Take the prompt and write a topic sentence. • Write at least three subsequent sentences that state a reason, detail or fact about your topic. • Don’t worry about spelling/grammar in this stage. • Just write all of your ideas.
Revising • “re” means again… “vis” means to see • Revising means seeing again. In this stage you are looking at your writing and seeing it again in light of making it easier to read, making it sound better, etc. • This stage is NOT about correcting your mistakes, although revising and editing often happen simultaneously. • The intent in revision is making your paper better by varying sentence length and structure, making better word choices, helping the reader be able “see” the action.
Editing • During this process you check for all types of mistakes in capitalization, usage(grammar), punctuation and spelling. CUPS • The student will be able to use a dictionary and a thesaurus during this process. • Read the whole paper to yourself and listen for errors. • Check the spelling of any word you are not sure about, but don’t stress over spelling…if the word is above the student’s grade level, spelling does not count off.
Publishing • For the purpose of the test, publishing is writing the final copy. • This copy should be as error-free as possible. • This copy MUST be legible, too.