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Writing Prompt. Please write a paragraph in response to the following prompt: Write a paragraph describing your absolute best or worst experience with writing. Be sure to include your reactions to the experience and reflect on why the experience was memorable . The Writing Process.
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Writing Prompt Please write a paragraph in response to the following prompt: Write a paragraph describing your absolute best or worst experience with writing. Be sure to include your reactions to the experience and reflect on why the experience was memorable.
The Writing Process 5 Steps to Better Writing
The 5 Steps of the Writing Process • Pre-Writing: Ideas, organization • Drafting: Writing it down for the first time • Revision: Making it sound “just right” • Editing: Checking the conventions • Publishing: Creating the final copy
An Investment of Time • Following all five steps take time • Time = A Quality End Result • Teachers should plan on facilitating students in class throughout all steps of the writing process • Check in on students’ progress throughout the assignment
Pre Writing • Helps get your ideas flowing • Put it in writing so you don’t forget • Organize your ideas • Makes your paper easier to write • Sets a purpose for your paper before you even start writing
Why Pre-Write? • Students have a chance to play around with the topic before they put pencil to paper • Student engagement increases—they can consider different topics and/or perspectives of the topics, and find one that they like • Differentiation: use organizers that fit the needs of the students
Drafting • Compose your ideas into sentences and paragraphs • Don’t expect it to be perfect • Expect to make changes! • It should be messy • Shows the thought process that you went through as you wrote • Write on ONE SIDE of the paper • Double space to leave room for revision
Why Draft? • Helps students work out the kinks in the piece of writing • Can be used as a formative assessment to evaluate the student’s understanding of your material • Helps assess if students are on track for meeting the lesson objectives • Identifies areas where student may need additional support (possible differentiation point)
Revision • This step should be done constantly throughout the drafting process • Focus on the traits of organization, word choice, sentence fluency, and voice when you’re revising • Read the piece of writing out loud to “hear” any mistakes or awkward passages
Why Revise? • Students make changes based on the assessments made during the drafting stage • Students evaluate their writing and thought process to determine what is working and what isn’t • Opportunity for students to collaborate with peers during revision stage
Editing • Editing focuses on conventions like capitalization, punctuation, grammar, and spelling • Have a partner help edit
Why Edit? • Makes writing audience-friendly and publication-ready • Focusing on conventions is a main responsibility of writing teachers, however, give students time to complete this step
Publishing • Create a final copy of your writing • Make your paper look like you are proud of your work • If you can’t type your final copy, write it neatly in ink • No crumples, rips, or “spiral fuzz” to make your final copy look sloppy • Make sure to check the rubric or checklist from your teacher before you hand in your final copy
Why Publish? • Students can show off pride in the work they’ve done • Opportunity to reach an audience • Publishing writing can influence readers • This is where students meet teacher’s expectations for an assignment
When to Use the Writing Process • Use these steps EVERY TIME you write anything • Even if it is a short piece of writing, you should still think (pre-write), draft, revise and edit (check it over) and publish (make it look the way the teacher expects) • This is not just for writing class—it’s for every class • Use it now, in high school, and beyond