50 Writing Lessons PDF
50 Writing Lessons PDF
50 Writing Lessons PDF
WRITING LESSONS
THAT WORK!
Motivating prompts
and easy activities
that develop the
essentials of
strong writing
S C H O L A S T I C
PROFESSIONALBOOKS
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Dedication
To Elizabeth McMillen, my grandmother, who taught school for a
quarter of a century in West Virginia. She brought her love of teaching
to all kinds of classrooms, including a one-room schoolhouse.
Acknowledgments
So many thanks to my wonderful editor Virginia Dooley for her
enthusiam and to Wendy Murray for the encouraging push in the
right direction.
Finally, love and thanks go to my husband Jim for the suggestions and
the support, the patience, and the coffee.
“Father on Black Ice” by Nancy White from Sun, Moon, Salt published by Word Works.
Used by permission of the poet.
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Reproducibles:
Transitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31
Unscramble the Sentences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32
Follow Up . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34
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Introduction
And yet, in spite of these legitimate concerns, we cannot and should not teach writing
with grim determination. We are shaping how students approach writing. In fact, we want
them to learn to love writing because finding joy in expression can have everything to do
with their writing confidently and well. Students should be engaged by writing, and if they
have positive experiences that ignite their imaginations and respect their natural intelli-
gence, they will be.
The intention of this book is to provide you with assignments that can help you keep your
students writing frequently, purposefully, and happily. To become flexible, inventive writ-
ers, students need the spice of life: a variety of assignments that build all kinds of skills,
work against mechanical writing, and give them a range of compositional experiences. This
book exposes students to different genres of creative, critical, and personal writing.
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The Premise
The overarching premise of this book is that the student who can paragraph well can
write, and that it is in the service of building the intelligent, compelling writer that stu-
dents do both expository and creative pieces. The first part of the book provides numerous
paragraphing assignments; the next part teaches students to link paragraphs and build
transitions; the final section is devoted to full compositions. Poetry assignments have been
included to enhance overall awareness of language. All of these assignments are designed
to promote focused, developed writing, but other skills are addressed, too, including pre-
writing skills (learning to brainstorm, gather ideas, and outline), making strong word
choices, using sentence variety, and employing diction wisely.
Why should students do both expository and creative assignments? The expository writer
who can create paragraph focus, organize and develop ideas thoroughly, and link para-
graphs effectively has learned skills absolutely essential to good writing. In concert with
this, working on creative assignments encourages students to use language imaginatively
and to trust and learn about their voices; the discipline of the essay sometimes works
against expressiveness and experimentation. Too much expository writing can lead to a
flat, unconfident voice and a mechanical sense of structure. Too much creative writing can
leave students at sea when it comes to the discipline of making an argument in an essay.
While the assignments by section move from discrete paragraphing prompts to full compo-
sition assignments, you may not want to move through the book in order. In terms of
building writing stamina, it is probably better for students to go back and forth between
shorter and longer assignments: short assignments allow students to work very closely on
focus and structure; longer assignments let them have experience organizing and develop-
ing ideas at length. However, if you have students who are new, inexperienced, or unfo-
cused writers, place more emphasis on the paragraphing assignments at first, which are
less intimidating, and introduce longer assignments as soon as it seems feasible.
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A Few Thoughts on Teaching Writing
Learning to write is challenging and sometimes difficult for children, so they need encour-
agement and applause, even for small gains like remembering to indent. Praise is not, of
course, all they need. They also need focused suggestions that will not overwhelm or
depress them; you want to point them in a very clear, understandable direction. Consider
giving them two or three focused pointers at the end of each assignment. If you are sad-
dled with very large classes and cannot reasonably grade an assignment a week, you can
keep students writing between fully graded assignments with focused journal work.
Students learn to write by doing; don’t let your inability to mark an assignment every week
get in their way. Journal writing can meet something of their need for constant writing
experience without jeopardizing your sanity with an inhuman amount of grading.
For all of you who are up early and late marking papers, I hope these assignments ease
your way. Teaching writing is consuming work, and, as we all know, sometimes it can
seem like a thankless task. Still, I believe what we do truly is important; we help students
discover a voice on paper, which is, to me, another form of being able to vote. And finally,
we get to work with the most incredibly fine and inspiring tools: the human mind, the
imagination, and language.
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PORTRAIT WRITING
Skills Focus: to support a generalization with vivid details
Assignment: In one well-developed paragraph, describe the personality of an individual you
know and like very much.
Ask students to convey this person’s character and essence. This person might be fun or funny or
sweet or kind or intriguing (or all or none of these). A reader should, by the end of the paragraph,
have a sharp sense of an individual personality—of how someone thinks and acts, what he or she
looks like, and how the writer feels about that person. Remind students that details are extremely
important here. If they write about a grandmother, a reader should see beyond a stereotype like
“nice old lady.” Even if Grandma is nice and old, she is more than that, just as students are more
than “good kids.” Encourage them to relate vignettes that illustrate personality.
Warm Up: Discuss different ways to approach writing topic sentences. Emphasize that students
should begin with a clear generalization about personality. In the body, they should support this
generalization with brief stories and relevant details, such as physical descriptions.
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Teaching Tip
A student may wish to write about someone they dislike; if you allow this, tell
them that a reader should not be able to recognize that person. Siblings, friends at
school, teachers, or administrators are not good subjects.
Follow Up: Have volunteers read aloud their paragraphs. Ask students if they were curious
about anything that the writer did not communicate about the person. This will help writers think
about the depth and detail of their writing.
THAT’S SO ANNOYING
Skills Focus: to create focus with a clear topic sentence
Assignment: Write about something that annoys you; use details that convey fully why this is
so bothersome.
Suggest that students think of trying family events, dull routines or chores, jam-packed stores,
lackluster entertainment, or shoddy products (especially toys or candy). Tell them that they should
be so specific that their readers should feel something, too, such as irritation, amusement, or both.
Warm Up: Think of something universally delightful to your students such as ice cream or
amusement parks. With students, brainstorm the things that are wonderful about ice cream or
amusement parks; write their responses on the board in a word web so they can see the
specific details.
After reviewing paragraph structure, have the class compose a great topic sentence: move them
away from the overly general or bland (such as “Ice cream is great”) to something more specific
and interesting (such as “Creamy, smooth, and sweet, ice cream in its many varieties is the perfect
solution to life’s little troubles”). Discuss how the topic sentence gives the writer somewhere to go.
Teaching Tip
Students enjoy this opportunity to say what they really think; let them do so with-
out unnecessary censure. Your support for their honesty will build their trust in
you as a reader and promote the development of an interesting and individual
voice. Students who write too cautiously do not write well.
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MOODY WEATHER
Skills Focus: to use vivid details to connect feelings and environment
Assignment: Write a first-person paragraph about the weather today and how it makes you
feel. Before you write, observe and think. How does it look outside? What mood does this weather
put you in?
For this assignment choose a day that is somehow notable: foggy and tired, or blustery and
nervous-feeling, and so on. Urge students to think for a moment about how this weather makes
them feel. Tell them to think of the day as an individual; it might be bright blue out, but what is
particular to this day? How does it smell: new and green, like fresh-cut grass from the park? What
is the wind like? Is it bringing the smells from a nearby factory their way?
Warm Up: Before they begin, remind students of paragraph structure. They should write a
strong topic sentence. Suggest that they begin with a generalization about the type of day it is and
how it makes them feel. Place additional emphasis here on the five senses: taste, touch, sight,
smell, and hearing. Remind students that great writing appeals to a reader’s senses.
Read aloud some models of good weather descriptions. For snow see the last paragraph of James
Joyce’s “The Dead” or the beginning of Joan Aiken’s The Wolves of Willoughby Chase; for a descrip-
tion of fall try Chapter 14 of Elizabeth George Speare’s The Witch of Blackbird Pond.
Follow Up: Have students read aloud their paragraphs and draw them into discussion about
how different the pieces are. Introduce them to the idea of subjectivity: to varying degrees, we do
not think alike. Students benefit from exploring what the idea of truth in writing means. We may
witness the same event but have different viewpoints or interpretations of it. Have them discuss
what causes this. Do we ever hear, or tell, “just the facts”?
With no clouds in the sky it is still subtly cloudy. I can see no sun, but yet it is bright. On a day like
today I feel calm, as all I can hear is the buzzing of city street cleaners.The sky, although lit by the
unseen sun, is a pale off-white.The sounds of the city only add to this calming effect, and, with the
familiar buildings surrounding and setting a place for the sky, I feel at home.
—Bethany, seventh grade
It was a city morning, early in the winter, and unusually warm and humid.The sky was white and
swollen, and the slanted brick and slate rooms stood out starkly against it.The smoke that rose
from the factory buildings could be seen in the distance.The streets were empty, and the occasional
body carried an umbrella in anticipation of the probable rain.The morning was quiet and every
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sound echoed through the street as if it were bouncing off the buildings in a ball.The only steady
sound was the low hum of a garbage truck picking up the bags off the sidewalk and loading onto an
ever-growing pile. —Lena, seventh grade
I’m getting a big fat headache right now sitting here being bored in class, looking out the window
and seeing a gloomy sky and wondering if it’ll rain. Inside, there is a smell and awareness of a stuffy
car and its exhaust fumes, while outside, it is a little chilly, but yet moist. It makes you feel all tired
out and wanting to sleep. Still, it’s a nice day, but only outside.When inside on this day, the most
refreshing thing is the outside air.The air comes into your nose and has its own distinct smell. I love
the sense of fresh air in the room, it clears you up and makes you feel good.There is a pigeon on
the stoop, enjoying the air while I have to be sitting here in class bored.There is a sense of urgency
to be outdoors, which is not being attended to. I wish it was 10:10. —Oliver, seventh grade
LINGERING MOOD
Skills Focus: to use similes to describe a place
Assignment: Describe the mood in a room or another place right after people have just left it;
pretend you are peeking in through a crack in the wall. This could be a dining room, a classroom,
a theater, a place of worship, or somewhere else. What does the room look and feel like at the
moment when it is empty again. Does it feel peaceful? Stirred up? Does anything indicate that peo-
ple have just been there: if you stumbled upon the room, would you know people had just left, or
not? Use similes in your description.
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When students describe a room that has been left, encourage them to use interesting word choices
and similes (comparisons beginning them with “like” or “as”).
Warm Up: Read the following simile from Bridge to Terabithia to students:
“…her pale brown hair stuck up all over her head like a squirrel’s nest on a winter branch.”
Discuss the way this comparison brings a strong image to mind. Encourage students to avoid
clichés in their similes.
HAIKU HONEY
Skills Focus: to attune students to language, rhythm, and image
Assignment: Write a series of five to ten haiku. Because this will be a “series” there should be
some unifying theme or element (like seasons or an exploration of different emotions). There do
not need to be transitions between the different haiku. Each haiku should have one or two won-
derfully vivid images.
Warm Up: You will need to introduce your students to haiku, which you can easily do on the
blackboard. (See below.) After you show them some haiku, then write one or two together on the
board. First, pick a topic, like spring or love, and then ask them to imagine an image that commu-
nicates the essence of spring. On the board, as you compose together, pay close attention to
counting syllables. Applaud all ideas, but push them to keep coming up with ideas until you have
something interesting. Discourage clichés.
Haiku is a Japanese form that is three lines long and has, usually, seventeen syllables (the first line
has five, the second seven, and the third five).
In haiku the writer usually creates one strong image, and oftentimes there is some seasonal refer-
ence or reference to the weather and/or the time of day.
Examples:
For the child who won’t
stop crying, she lights a lamp
in the autumn dusk
Kawahigashi Kekigodo (1837-1937)
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Follow-Up: Read or copy for them some famous haiku series composed in English, like the
modern poet Wallace Stevens’s “Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird” or Etheridge Knight’s
jazzy haiku series called “Haiku.”
FANTASY LIVING
Skills Focus: to use fanciful details
Assignment: Write one or two long paragraphs in which you describe a fantasy room—think
of your favorite kind of room. The description can be as wild and fanciful as you want. Feel free to
invent machines and gizmos that do not and cannot exist.
Begin the assignment by reading aloud to students a detailed, fantastic description. My students
have responded well to the description of a bathroom from F. Scott Fitzgerald’s short story “The
Diamond as Big as the Ritz.” This passage is often incredibly stimulating for students; don’t
be surprised if you hear echoes of Fitzgerald in their pieces (writing after models is a terrific way
to learn).
Warm Up: On the board, write the five senses—taste, smell, touch, sight, hearing. Tell students
that their writing should excite and please the reader’s senses; the reader should be swept away
or amazed by the wonderful rooms they describe. Encourage students to have fun with this
assignment.
Discussion: After students read their pieces aloud (students love to share them), start a discus-
sion of the word imagination. Have a student look up the word in the dictionary and read aloud
the definition. Ask the class where they think ideas come from. And why, do they suppose, do
people love fantasy so much?
DUELING INSULTS
Skills Focus: to use language in inventive, enjoyable ways
Assignment: Write a story in which two characters are trading very original insults. Before
you begin, think over what they are arguing about (money, love, schoolwork, friends). And be
sure to use proper dialogue form. Get as nasty and mean in these insults as possible but do not
use curse words; they’re too easy.
To get students going ask them for some common insults, like “pea brain” or “spineless.” Talk to
them about making the insults precise and personal. They can be whole sentences, like “You’re so
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boring even your mother falls asleep when you talk,” or two-word phrases, like “human sedative.”
You might tell them some of Shakespeare’s gloriously specific insults, like “glass-gazer” or “you
bead, you acorn,” or “you canker blossom.”
Teaching Tip
Let students know that you think it is just fine for them to make this story really
nasty, but also be sure they know very precise insults are usually incredibly funny.
Follow Up: Students will love to read these pieces out loud, so don’t hold them back; it should
be great fun. Also, a discussion about clichés naturally follows this assignment. Put some romantic
clichés on the board and have students try to come up with more original ideas: heart-stopping, her
eyes were like pools of blue, sweet as a rose, dew-kissed, pretty as a picture, and so on.
MANY BEGINNINGS
Skills Focus: to build writing stamina
Assignment: By the end of this assignment, you should have seven story beginnings. Here’s
how the assignment works. You will receive a slip of paper that contains the first line of a story.
Copy down the line on a sheet of paper and then continue the story. Write quickly, and don’t
worry too much about what you’re writing.
You’ll work on that story for about five minutes, until I tell you to stop. Then pass the slip of
paper to the next student; you’ll receive a new slip of paper from another student. Skip two lines,
copy down the new line, and start a new story! You should not connect the stories at all; each
story beginning should stand on its own.
The first lines for the stories are on the reproducible, Many Beginnings (see pages 23-24); copy the
pages and cut them into slips. Tell students that they will probably need two sheets of paper for
their stories. Also, you will need to clarify to whom they should pass their slips of paper.
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Teaching Tip
Present this assignment with a lot of enthusiasm and energy. At first let students
write for about five minutes or until you see that everyone has a paragraph or so.
After the first change of slips, check around the room and make sure everyone is
on track; sometimes students think they are supposed to link the stories.You
might want to bring in a timer; the loud ding creates a little nervous excitement.
And by all means, urge students to write quickly; lash them along in a humorous
way.They’ll be proud of how much they’ve written by the end of the assignment.
Follow Up: Mark these pieces with a light hand since they were done in a very uncontrolled
manner. You want to praise students for how much they wrote and applaud their ideas and
images. Have them read aloud their favorite story starters. A natural extension of this assignment
is, of course, to ask students to choose their favorite beginnings and write stories with them.
STRONG FINISHES
Skills Focus: to write strong concluding sentences
Assignment: Your school administration has decided to institute a new homework policy.
From now on, each weekday students will be required to complete three hours of homework, and
each weekend a total of four hours. Write a paragraph telling how you and your fellow students
feel about this new policy.
Discuss the importance of writing a strong concluding sentence with your students. Explain that a
writer often ends a paragraph with a sentence that returns to the basic theme—but in light of the
facts reviewed in the body. Introduce students to phrases such as “in conclusion” and “in light of
this evidence,” but also emphasize that these phrases can sound overly formulaic. Younger stu-
dents unfamiliar with these terms should learn them. Older students may need to learn about
other ways to conclude such as making a twist on the topic sentence or referring in summation to
the facts addressed.
Warm Up: Read the following paragraph aloud to your students.
I object to the new town council law that prohibits anyone from riding bicycles within the
town’s borders. More than 45% of the town’s residents own bicycles, and many of these bicycle
owners use them to commute to work and school. Since I do not own a car, the bicycle prohi-
bition law means that I will have to walk to school. It will now take me three times as long to
travel back and forth to school.
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Ask students if the piece seems finished, or do they feel that they are still in the middle of learning
about something. Ask volunteers for ideas about how to end the paragraph.
Follow Up: Have students look at another piece of writing they’ve done. If a piece needs help
and a student is willing, ask other students for ideas on how to end the paragraph. Write their
ideas on the board. While a student could do this, it will probably be easier, quicker, and clearer if
you record the ideas on the board.
OUR TOWN
Skills Focus: to state an opinion
Assignment: Write a paragraph that takes a stand on this question:
Is your home town/city/area/neighborhood a good place to live?
Back up your opinion. Explain why you think what you think, but do not use the first person.
Encourage students to state their opinions very clearly in their topic sentences. They should have
clear and compelling examples that would persuade someone that they are right. Encourage stu-
dents to write well-developed paragraphs; the paragraph should neither be too long (so many sen-
tences that it needs to break off into a new paragraph), nor should it be too short (a few sentences
that only thinly develop the topic sentence).
Warm Up: Do some writing on the board with the class. Ask students to make generalizations
about something simple and handy such as their school desks or their pens. Write a topic sentence
on the board such as “The Good Write Pen is a good pen.” Ask for ideas about how to make that
topic sentence more precise and more interesting. To reinforce their grasp of paragraph structure,
ask students what ideas back up the generalization in the topic sentence. List their ideas on the
board.
CONTROVERSY!
Skills Focus: to support an argument with facts
Assignment: Take a stand on a controversial topic. Support your argument with facts and
convince your reader that you are right. Do not use the first person.
There are a range of topics you might suggest, and obviously not all topics work well everywhere.
Here are some questions you might have students consider:
= Should kids be able to get tattoos without parental permission?
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= Are school uniforms a good idea or a bad one?
= Should smoking be illegal for everyone?
= Should Americans support NASA with tax dollars?
= Should people be required by law to vote?
= Should school be held year-round?
= Should kids have total access to the Internet?
Warm Up: First prepare students for writing by having them take notes. 1) Tell everyone to
select a question and write it at the top of a sheet of paper. 2) Then students should skip two lines
and write their general answers to the question; this will be the basis of their topic sentence. 3)
They should jot down a list of reasons. Give students several minutes to compile their lists.
Explain that they should use the lists to help them write the bodies of their paragraphs.
Then have students write a paragraph using their notes. Inform students that the topic sentence
should not only be a clear response to the question, but it should also give a sense of “why.” For
example, “Main Street should definitely be closed to cars on the weekend so that everyone can walk
easily from shop to shop without living in fear of the traffic.”
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SUM IT UP!
Skills Focus: to write a summary of a chapter
Assignment: Write a one-paragraph summary of Chapter ____. This summary should
provide a sense of what happens in the chapter; if a reader lost this chapter of the book, your
summary could help him or her go on to the next chapter without getting confused.
Tell students that their paragraphs should not exceed seven sentences. They should read the chap-
ter over (some may only need to skim) and trace what happens. Remind them to take note of
significant changes in mood and setting. The paragraph should be organized chronologically; it
should echo the order of action in the chapter. The paragraph should not be too detailed; on the
other hand, if a detail or image is highlighted by the author, it should be part of the summary.
Note: This assignment is simple, but it can be enormously revealing about how well a student is
reading. Furthermore, being able to summarize is one of the most crucial cognitive skills; it forces
students to synthesize, choose, and condense. In addition, being able to summarize is useful in
every discipline. I tell students that they should write a short summary of any chapter in science
or history when they are confused; this helps them pinpoint what they do not understand, which
allows them to come to a teacher with specific questions rather than with vague and hard-to-
address complaints.
LISTEN UP!
Skills Focus: to build listening skills
Assignment: Listen to the short story I am going to read. Afterwards you will write an infor-
mal summary of it.
Many standardized tests include sections in which students respond to a selection that is read to
them. To build listening skills, read aloud a short story to students. For younger students, read
Rikki-Tikki-Tavi by Rudyard Kipling or “The Red-Headed League” by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. For
older students, Ernest Hemingway’s “Three Shots” and “Indian Camp” work well together; or read
“The Tell-Tale Heart” by Edgar Allan Poe. Tell students that you’re going to ask them to write an
informal summary after you finish reading (“informal” because you want to avoid having students
listen too anxiously). If this feels more like a game than a serious assignment, you may get better
results.
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Student Sample: Chapter 15 of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Huck and Jim encountered some fog, and Huck got lost in the middle of it all. So when he finally
found Jim again, he was saying how he never got lost.Then he told Jim he had never seen any fog or
any islands, and that he had been speaking to him for ten minutes and he was drunk. Jim then goes
on talking about how a true friend wouldn’t lie about sleeping, so he really got angry with Huck and
started yelling at him. —Jasmine, seventh grade
ONE-OF-A-KIND CHARACTER
Skills Focus: to analyze a literary character
Assignment: In one well-structured paragraph describe a character from the book. Reveal
the character’s personality and his or her situation in the book. Use examples and quotations to
support your topic sentence.
Have students use this assignment for a book they are reading. For homework, have students first
take some notes. They should write a generalization at the top of the page and then some notes
that include at least two examples and two quotations that explain the generalization. They should
include the page numbers on which they found the quotations. In class the next day, check over
students’ notes and then have them write the paragraph. Have them refer to the What Is a
Paragraph? reproducible (page 21) to remind them of how to proceed. Discourage students from
beginning only with a physical description, unless that is the topic.
Warm Up: To show students how to take notes, write this format on the board:
Generalization: At the beginning of Abel’s Island by William Steig, Abel is used to the very best of
everything. In fact, he seems to be spoiled. Still, Abel is likable.
page 4: Abel’s lunch is filled with expensive ingredients like caviar and champagne.
page 4: Abel gives a daisy umbrella to his wife.
page 6: When the picnic is rained on, Abel gets into a huff. He is “offended at the thoughtless
weather.”
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Teaching Tip
Tell students that to write well about a book they should think like a lawyer; they
need to find evidence to back up their ideas. No lawyer would say, “My client is
innocent” without evidence. No jury would be convinced by vagueness.To find this
“evidence,” students need first to do some thinking and re-reading; they need to dis-
cover what they think and why they think it.This legal analogy is extremely effective.
The idea that a lawyer would assert innocence without proof can sound amusingly
preposterous, but do make the point that their writing should not sound “legal.”
Student Sample:
In The Witch of Blackbird Pond by Elizabeth George Speare, Goodwife Cruff is a very mean person.
She hardly feeds Prudence, and she told her she was too stupid and too old to be in the town’s
school. Also, she abuses her child by making her stand up and watch her and her husband eat.The
father is a little nicer, but not much; occasionally he slips her a morsel of food when Goodwife
Cruff isn’t looking. All the scenes in this book that Goodwife Cruff is in really give you a good
impression of how cruel and nasty she is. —Rebecca, fifth grade
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What Is a Paragraph?
A paragraph is a unit of writing, a group of sentences that all work together. A paragraph
has a beginning, a middle, and an end.
1.Topic Sentence
The topic sentence states what the paragraph is about.The statement should be clear
and interesting.The topic sentence is usually the first sentence, but it may appear later in
the paragraph.
11. Body
The body includes all the sentences that go between the topic sentence and the con-
cluding sentence. In the body you explain the topic in detail and back up what you say
with examples.
In a story, you start a new paragraph when the focus shifts, something new happens, or
there is a change of place, time, subject, or mood. Also, when writing dialogue, you indent,
or start a new paragraph, each time the speaker changes.The nature of the paragraph’s
beginning, middle, and end is usually different in a story than it is in an essay; a story
might not have a topic sentence. In a story, you often create the focus of a paragraph by
developing ideas through very specific language.
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Name __________________________________________ Date __________________
“Maycomb was an old town, but it was a tired old town when I first knew it.
In rainy weather the streets turned to red slop; grass grew on the sidewalks,
the courthouse sagged in the square. Somehow, it was hotter then: a black
dog suffered on a summer’s day; bony mules hitched to Hoover carts flicked
flies in the sweltering shade of the live oaks on the square. Men’s stiff collars
wilted by nine in the morning. Ladies bathed before noon, after their three-
o’clock naps, and by nightfall were like soft teacakes with frostings of sweat
and sweet talcum.” —from To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
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Story Starters for
“Many Beginnings”
Copy and cut these first lines into separate slips. Distribute one line to
each student.
After a long drive, old Mr. Dingleson always liked to clean the exterior of his
car until it was spit spot.
Listening to the weather report on the police radio, the family huddled
around a candle in the dark house.
The younger students, with their whining and their unzipped jackets, were
driving him/her crazy.
The arrival of an alien at dinner was not something Jeffrey could figure out
how to explain.Where should he begin?
Sweetie Jenkins had always flown first class with her Mummy and Daddy.
The sound of the far-off train whistle made the gloomy night seem even
scarier.
The children realized anxiously that the tide was coming in.
Janey hid under the old tractor, staring at the huge muddy wheel, plotting her
revenge.
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Story Starters for “Many Beginnings”
I like to irritate people so very, very much.
Even though the aromas of the little house were overwhelmingly wonderful,
she still felt . . .
Given the fact that cavities were being filled just feet away, the receptionist in
the dentist’s office seemed far too happy.
It depressed him/her, the way his mother sat in the light of the computer all
day. Why was his/her sister so embarrassing?
Standing in the hot sun, waiting for Super Express, the fastest roller coaster in
the world, Hannah felt certain that she would . . .
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Par t 2
L INKING
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OF THE FOUR SEASONS
Skills Focus: to create transitions between contrasting paragraphs
Assignment: In two linked paragraphs, write about two seasons. Explain which season you
like the most and which season you like least.
Before they begin, ask students to suggest the best way to organize their paragraphs. Steer them to
the idea of creating paragraph coherence and writing about one season at a time.
In order to help students write fully developed paragraphs, have them think of all the things they
can write about. What can they do at certain times of year that they cannot do during other seasons?
What is the weather like? Remind students to appeal to all of the reader’s senses: what seasonal
smells, sights, and sounds make them feel as they do?
Warm Up: Highlight the transition inherent between the two paragraphs; you may want to do
this after students have written the first paragraph at home. Go over transitional terms on the
board (see Transitions reproducible, page 31), underscoring words and phrases useful for making
contrasts: on the other hand, conversely, on the contrary, unlike, instead, whereas. Students might
want to use an if/then construction. Write the following sentences on the board:
“If soccer practice is the joy of my life, then doing my chores is the bane of my existence.”
“If I look forward to visiting my cousins, I dread the annual trip to Great Aunt Snarky.”
Ask students what each sentence implies about the topics of paragraphs one and two.
Teaching Tip
If you move through the room as students write, you can intercept problems.Try
to spot-check the transitional sentences, especially those of the weaker writers.
26
place. It could be a house or a building or a natural place, like a cave or a forest. In your first para-
graph, write about how this place looks from the outside; in the second paragraph, go to the
inside, moving through the haunted place. Make your writing as atmospheric as you can.
Remind students that there needs to be some kind of bridge created between the descriptions of
the outside and the inside. Ask students to brainstorm about how transitions might work. For
example, the narrator might start walking inside a house or building at the end of paragraph one,
or a huge, supernatural owl might carry the narrator by the scruff of the neck away from a safe
mountainside into the forest deep. Discuss how, in a story, a bridge needs to be subtly built; using
phrases such as “on the other hand” would break the mood.
Warm Up: This assignment can be great fun for students; it works especially well if you read
them something scary, such as Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Raven” or a few paragraphs from “The Fall
of the House of Usher.” This gets their brains tingling with mysterious, gothic vocabulary words.
You might have students call out great spooky words and write them on the board (gloom, gloam-
ing, murky, wretched, spoiled, ruined, lost, mournful, pale, ghostly, deathly, chill, odd, eerie, foggy, dusk,
apparition, and so on).
Follow Up: Students love to read these sorts of pieces aloud. You can use their work to celebrate
Halloween without chaos or sugar-induced madness. Carve out enough time so that all volunteers
can read.
IN ORDER
Skills Focus: to use transitions to show sequence
Assignment: Follow the directions on Unscramble the Sentences to complete the activity.
Provide each student with copies of pages 32–33. Tell them to:
1. First identify the two topics. Divide the sentences into two groups, labeling them A and B.
2. Determine the topic sentence and the concluding sentence for each group.
3. On a separate piece of paper, put the paragraphs together again. Remind them to pay close
attention to the flow of logic. Watch for key words like so and however.
In the box on page 28 are the sentences put back together as they were originally written. Have
students look at the structure of the paragraphs. Discuss with them the transitional device the
writer used.
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Answer Key
Reginald McSneer only appears to be a good candidate for Mayor of the Arts; in reality he is a
dull-witted person who thinks only of junk food and talk TV. On the street, however, we see him
parading around town in a tweed suit and French beret, peering “intelligently” through glasses, pre-
tending to care about the arts and the welfare of our citizens. If you catch him at home, will he be
reading or listening to music? He will not. No, he will be home, on the couch, singing along with
commercials for hamburgers. On voting day, you must firmly, soundly, without regret, pull the lever
and reject lazy boy Reginald McSneer and instead vote yes for Bahiyah the Lovely.
Bahiyah deserves every vote in this town because time and again she has demonstrated her love
of the arts. A student of drums, a painter of watercolors, a fan of museums, Bahiyah has already
made the arts her life.While others crave dinner, she craves poetry. If you hum a commercial jingle
to her, she will stare at you blankly because she watches TV, but only once in a while. Bahiyah has
volunteered in the Youth Center, teaching painting for free. She painted the door of City Hall with
a mural depicting a choir of town children. In City Hall we need someone like Bahiyah, not only
adorning its outer gateways, but directing its inner halls. So vote for Bahiyah the Lovely on
November third and make a major change in the Office of the Arts.
CRAFTING TRANSITIONS
Skills Focus: to practice using transitional techniques
Assignment: Write two different topic sentences to follow The Snowflake Institute paragraph.
In one, repeat a key word to create the transition; in another, use a transitional expression. Pick
the one you like best and then write a paragraph about an imaginary, terrible ski school called
“Alps Are Us.” Make up all the details but write in the same tone as the first paragraph; they
should go together well.
Copy the following paragraph on the board for students.
The Snowflake Institute of Safe Skiing provides the best winter-sport instruction around.While
other ski schools merely slap skis on you and teach you the snow plow, the Snowflake Institute
recognizes that getting on a ski lift safely the first day may be challenge enough for many a skier.
More than once, the new skier at Alps Are Us has been knocked over on his or her face and
forced to eat a huge and humiliating mouthful of snow. At The Snowflake Institute, the skiing
process is broken down into steps so that by the end of a week, a new skier can put on ski
boots and skis, ride a lift, and ski down the beginners’ slopes without fear.
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Warm Up: Have students look at the tone and intention of the paragraph about The Snowflake
Institute. What is the writer trying to do? Why is the writer writing it? Does he or she have a bias?
Who is the implied audience for the paragraph?
Follow Up: Have students write two paragraphs that make a comparison between two ele-
ments (restaurants, toys, books, and so on). Tell them to work to make a clear transition between
the two paragraphs.
FOLLOW UP
Skills Focus: to make smooth transitions between paragraphs
Assignment: Follow the directions on Follow Up to complete the writing activity.
Provide each student with a copy of page 34. Tell them to first think carefully. What is the subject?
What is the tone of the writing? What kinds of topics could logically follow this paragraph? Tell
them their writing style should imitate the style of this paragraph as much as possible. Finally tell
them to choose a favorite transitional/topic sentence and write a paragraph that could logically fol-
low this one.
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Teaching Tip
Note-taking can be very important in writing.You might spot-check students’ work
to be sure they have taken notes. Do not let them simply compile a list in their
heads.
Follow Up: A natural way to enrich this assignment is hold a debate in class. Write this sen-
tence on the board:
Televisions should be locked up when adults are not home.
After the debate, have students discuss how writing the paragraphs prepared them to debate. Lead
them to the idea that the writing process can help us clarify our thoughts. Point out that dis-
cussing and debating ideas can also help clarify our writing; talking over an idea can be useful
before writing about a difficult topic.
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Transitions
What is a transition?
A transition is the element that smoothes the leap from one paragraph to the next.
The reader should not feel disoriented by a new paragraph; he or she should feel that
it all makes sense, that the ideas or elements clearly connect.
First of all, in the concluding sentence of a paragraph, a writer often points to or sets
up the topic of the next paragraph.
Then, in the topic sentence of the next paragraph, the writer refers directly or indi-
rectly to the topic of the previous paragraph.You can integrate key words or phrases
from the concluding sentence into your topic sentence.You can also make this con-
nection with a transitional word.
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Name __________________________________________ Date __________________
Sentences
Reginald McSneer only appears to be a good candidate for Mayor of the Arts;
in reality he is a dull-witted person who thinks only of junk food and talk TV.
If you hum a commercial jingle to her, she will stare at you blankly because
she watches TV, but only once in a while.
On voting day, you must firmly, soundly, without regret, pull the lever and
reject lazy boy Reginald McSneer and instead vote yes for Bahiya the Lovely.
Bahiyah deserves every vote in this town because time and again she has
demonstrated her love of the arts.
On the street, however, we see him parading around town in a tweed suit
and French beret, peering “intelligently” through glasses, pretending to care
about the arts and the welfare of our citizens.
So vote for Bahiyah the Lovely on November third and make a major change
in the Office of the Arts.
32
Unscramble the Sentences (continued)
He will not.
Bahiyah has volunteered in the Youth Center, teaching painting for free.
No, he will be home, on the couch, singing along with commercials for ham-
burgers.
She painted the door of City Hall with a mural depicting a choir of town
children.
In City Hall we need someone like Bahiyah, not only adorning its outer gate-
ways, but directing its inner halls.
33
Name __________________________________________ Date __________________
Follow Up
Read the paragraph below and then compose three transitional sentences
for the next paragraph.You will need to think of an appropriate topic for
the next paragraph.
Life in the big city has so many merits that it may be hard to name them all,
but, really, it is the liveliness of city dwellers and the ideas they generate that
provide a city with its special glow and capacity for growth.What makes a
city unique varies, but nearly all cities are associated with business, innova-
tion, the arts, and ethnic diversity. From New York City to Chicago to
Seattle, people will stand in line to see plays, art shows, and concerts; people
are interested in things outside themselves.The streets bustle with all kinds
of people and all kinds of activity and creativity, though admittedly, not
everything that people do in a city is laudable or good. Still, even the build-
ings are often awe-inspiring; architecture is just another testament to the
amazing power of the human mind. Perhaps Samuel Johnson spoke for all
cities when he said of his favorite grand town, “When a man is tired of
London, he is tired of life.” Cities are for those with untiring spirit.
1.
2.
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On a separate sheet of paper or on the back of this sheet, write the next
paragraph. Be sure to start your paragraph with one of the sentences you
wrote above. Finally, write a fitting title your two-paragraph composition.
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FALLEN HERO
Skills Focus: to develop a personal essay
Assignment: Sometimes people we admire disappoint us: we learn that they are only human.
Write about a time when you learned that someone you admired had “feet of clay.” How did you
see this person before the disappointment? What brought about the change? Did you learn any-
thing about people in general from this experience?
Ask students to give this assignment some thought. This person could be someone they know per-
sonally, like a friend or family member, or it could be someone in the public eye.
Provide students with a copy of The Essay (page 56). After discussing the form of an essay, have
them look at the assignment question. You want them to learn to respond to the full scope of the
question. Based on the question, ask them how they might organize such a discussion. What
might the different paragraphs be about? For instance, students might use a whole paragraph to
explain how the person had been idealized and why. Emphasize that they should fully address the
topic. Two possible outlines they might consider appear below. You can write them up on the
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board for students’ consideration. If they have different ideas about how to proceed, encourage
them to experiment, but ask what they are considering doing to see if it sounds worthwhile.
Possible Essay Outlines:
A. The first outline below is based on the classic essay structure. This outline would help a student
address the question in a full way and give them a sense of how to proceed. If you have students
who need to work on structure and idea development, this outline would be helpful.
I. Introduction: the subject of the composition
II. Why he or she was idealized
III. The source and nature of the disappointment
IV. What the student learned about idealizing people
B. The outline might look like this:
I. A vignette that tells the story of a disappointment
II. How and why the person had been idealized
III. Why this disappointment was so upsetting
IV. What was learned through this experience
Follow Up: This essay is a natural occasion for students to share with each other. You might
ask students to listen for the structure each writer used and to see if they can describe how the
essay was organized and if it addressed the topic completely. Discuss with the class what it means
here specifically and in general to address a topic fully.
FAMILY PHOTOGRAPH
Skills Focus: to build storytelling skills
Assignment: In this piece, you’ll write about your family. Begin with an interesting, impor-
tant, or evocative family photo. Ruminate on this picture, on what it reveals, and how it makes
you feel.
Talk with students about how to approach this assignment. For instance, they may want to discuss
the day the picture was taken. Tell students to try to write at least two pages, but emphasize that
they shouldn’t keep writing if they have nothing more to say. Students should choose pictures
with stories or a sense of mystery behind them. They may want to use more formal pictures, but
sometimes those odd, informal, or discarded photos no one ever sees are more interesting to
think about.
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Teaching Tip
Avoid being overly prescriptive about the form this piece should take; students need
to work on discovering form, too. Let them use their instincts and see what hap-
pens. If someone asks for a suggestion on how to begin, ask other students for ideas.
Follow Up: This is an assignment students are often quite eager to read aloud. Since students
will be reading about their families, remind the class of the value of being receptive and generous.
AUTOBIOGRAPHY
Skills Focus: to use vignettes in a composition
Assignment: Write the story of your life until this point. From reading your composition, we
should have a good sense of the circumstances of your life (where and how you have lived). We
should also hear about some of your favorite and/or important memories from different times in
your life.
Tell students that they do not have to include everything; they should focus on what they think is
important or representative. The whole composition may contain one or more vignettes. These will
provide the reader with a vivid sense of the writer’s story.
Teaching Tip
Some students will have a great deal to write about; some may feel that their stories
are boring or unimportant. Encourage them to imagine their autobiographies as
something to save.They will enjoy re-reading their work as adults.
Follow Up: Students will certainly enjoy sharing these stories, so do have them read their
autobiographies aloud. You also might read aloud childhood passages from a wonderful memoir
such as Frank McCourt’s Angela’s Ashes, James McBride’s The Color of Water, Isaac Bashevis Singer’s
A Day of Pleasure, Roald Dahl’s Boy, or Eudora Welty’s One Writer’s Beginnings.
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VARIETY IS THE SPICE OF LIFE
Skills Focus: to avoid repetition
Assignment: Follow the directions to complete Variety is the Spice of Life.
Provide each student with a copy of page 57. Have them follow the directions to complete the page.
Warm Up: Begin by asking students to listen to the following paragraph (or copy it on the
blackboard). Ask them to think about what’s wrong with it.
Bob went with Joe to the store. Bob and Joe bought some shoe polish. Bob and Joe went home.
They polished all the shoes.The shoes were shiny again. Bob and Joe then made dinner. Dinner
was very dull and bland.They made spaghetti again. Spaghetti was the only dish they ever ate.
Bob and Joe were very silly and dull themselves. One day a girl named Louise arrived.
Help them to see that the paragraph contains three common writing mistakes: 1) Unnecessary rep-
etition of key nouns: If the writer made good clear use of pronouns, the paragraph would sound
better. 2) All of the sentences are the same length. The repetitive rhythm is tiring and dull. 3) The
language is flat. Nothing is described vividly.
To convey the same information more concisely really takes fewer words. Read the following
revised paragraph to show how the same information can be conveyed more concisely.
Bob and Joe went to the store to buy shoe polish.When they returned home, they shined all
the shoes and then made their usual dinner of spaghetti.The pasta was dull and bland, just like
Bob and Joe, but this changed when Louise arrived.
To make the information interesting, you would need to enliven the paragraph’s tone and add
details.
Bob and Joe, never the most interesting of men, spent another evening completing their mind-
crushingly dull routine. Go to the store, buy shoe polish. Come home, polish shoes. Make din-
ner, eat spaghetti.They spent whole beautiful days like robots, never noticing the apple-crisp
days of autumn or the mellow days of summer. Routine had trapped them for so long and so
completely that they had come to embody routine. One day, however, a pink convertible pulled
up their driveway, and a girl stepped out: Louise.
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Remind students of the importance of sentence variety by reading the first Bob and Joe paragraph
from the Variety is the Spice of Life lesson above. Provide each student with copies of pages 58–59.
Have them follow the directions to complete the page. Encourage volunteers to read their sen-
tences aloud.
SHEER EXCITEMENT
Skills Focus: to write sentences in a vivid and interesting way
Assignment: Write about the most exciting thing that ever happened to you. Choose words
and write sentences that really convey how exciting it was to you so that the reader feels excited
too.
Urge students to try to connect to that feeling of excitement before they start writing; they want to
get in the mood. Gently nudge them to choose the most vivid, descriptive words as possible in
their compositions.
Warm Up: On the board rewrite and expand on the following sentences with student sugges-
tions. Make them more specific, energetic, and interesting.
For example, “A hot air balloon flew over my house” might become “One hot summer afternoon,
just as I was sitting down to drink lemonade in the garden, just as I was going to close my eyes for
a nap, a huge hot air balloon sailed right over our backyard, and in it, people were shouting for
help.”
As they revise, the sentences might become longer or turn into different lengths. They will need to
imagine the experience of the speaker. Some sentences for revision:
“My little sister was born in the back of our van.”
“My father woke me up and told me we were going on a surprise vacation to Disney World.”
“We went to see my favorite singer last night.”
WHAT IS?
Skills Focus: to use quotation to shape an essay
Assignment: Study these famous quotations. Choose one that you either agree or disagree
with. Write an informal personal essay reflecting on the theme of the quotation. Don’t worry too
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much here about structure, but try to write a page or two. Be sure the reader knows what you
think and why you think it.
Quotations:
“...Truth is precious and divine...” —Samuel Butler
“Life is short; live it up.” —Nikita Khrushchev
“To thine own self be true.” —William Shakespeare
Add any quotations you feel your students would enjoy writing about. Give students at least half
an hour to write on their themes. Tell students to introduce the quotation somewhere in the begin-
ning of their compositions. They should stay on the topic and paragraph appropriately, but they
should not worry too much about structure. Encourage students to think on paper with this
assignment. Has personal experience influenced a response to the statement? Explain to students
that they don’t necessarily have to come to a conclusion, but they should be specific about their
responses and give some examples.
Warm Up: Before students begin to write, spend a few minutes discussing each quotation and
what it means. What questions does the quotation raise? If students think truth is “precious,” then
they should explain why. If students seem hesitant, you might hint at some of the implications of
the quotations. For instance, if life is short, should we really live it up? What are the benefits of
doing that? What are the dangers?
Follow Up: After you return this set of papers, divide students into three discussion groups
based on the quotations. Ask each group to discuss the quotation together and urge them to read
sections of their essays aloud to each other. Let students chat with each other informally. Then,
while they are still in their groups, ask if anybody heard an idea from another student that they
had not thought of. Ask: What makes us respond to the same statement so differently?
BEAUTIFUL DREAMER
Skills Focus: to use a verbal refrain to shape a piece
Assignment: What do you dream about doing and being? Where do you dream about going?
What do you hope the future will be like for yourself? for the world? Why do you hope so? In one
or two pages, write a series of paragraphs that each begin with the sentence, “I dream” or, “I some-
times dream” or some other variation.
This assignment, which works well in the period around Martin Luther King Jr. Day, is designed to
get students to express something of their interior world on paper. Tell them not to worry about
being realistic; no one really knows much in advance about what might happen. They can wish for
anything on paper.
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Warm Up: To get students started with this assignment, ask if any of them know Martin Luther
King’s famous “I have a dream” speech. Read aloud parts of this speech (or play a recording of it).
Then reread it, leaving out the refrain “I have a dream.” Discuss the difference in effect the refrain
has on the speech.
WHAT’S IN A MEAL
Skills Focus: to focus on creating atmosphere
Assignment: Tell the story of a memorable or holiday meal in your household. Create a sense
of an individual occasion and give the particulars: the characters, their conversation, the setting,
and the food. Create a strong sense of mood. How did you feel about your family during that
meal?
Ask students to focus on creating a sense of atmosphere: the reader should know what it is like to
share a holiday meal with each student’s family. The reader should smell the aromas from the
kitchen, hear the arguments about basting the turkey, and so on. Word choices should reflect the
atmosphere they’re trying to create. (This assignment works especially well just after Thanksgiving.)
Follow Up: This is a fine assignment for students to revise since the focus is simple. Give stu-
dents comments that push them to be more detailed or more precise about their feelings: show
them the opportunities in their pieces to create a sense of mood. After students revise their work
in light of your comments, have them read aloud the revisions. After polishing their writing, they
will be eager to share their work.
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The journals can simply be a standard-sized spiral notebook: you ask students to bring in their
own. Keep the journals in your classroom, and pass them out at appropriate moments, which real-
ly can be planned or spontaneous. If you use journal writing over the course of a whole term or
year, do find time early to look them over to make sure everyone is on the right track. After that,
look them over at regular but not necessarily frequent intervals. You can write responses directly
onto each page, or if you want to leave their pages unsullied, devote the last page or two of their
journals to a general response section. Make sure your responses are supportive; do not focus on
spelling. Tell students what you found interesting; try to converse with them on paper about their
ideas. Take them seriously as thinkers: we want to create thinkers.
Note: Occasionally, a student may feel uncomfortable about something personal he or she has
written; in that case, reassure the student about your general intentions as a reader. But if the stu-
dent wants to pull that page out of the notebook, respect his or her wishes. We do not want, how-
ever inadvertently, to invade student privacy. Writing freely can lead students to express things
they may not have intended to utter. It’s better for them to write freely and then edit than to write
in a constrained, self-conscious manner. (However, should you read something disturbing or
alarming, it may be necessary to involve the appropriate administrator.)
SO FAR AWAY
Skills Focus: to create a believable character
Assignment: You are going to create a character who is far from home, probably feeling very
out of place, and trying to get home. Give the reader a very clear sense of who the character is.
Also, describe the setting well. You have to invent a character, a place, and an obstacle for the
character to overcome so he or she can get home. By the end of the story, it should be clear
whether or not that’s possible.
Remind students of all the factors that go into who we are: age, sex, ethnicity, class, temperament,
family background, and current situation. Someone may normally be easygoing, but food short-
ages caused by war might bring out something different in that person.
Tell students that the reader should quickly know who the character is and why he or she is away
from home. The writer can decide whether or not the character will get to return home; the story
does not need to include the actual return home. Some stories may be sad, and some may be
happy.
Warm Up: Ask students to think of stories (and movies, if it helps) that involve someone far
from home. Some fictional models include Abel in Abel’s Island, Kit in The Witch of Blackbird Pond,
or Huck and Jim in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.
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Teaching Tip
If a student says he or she cannot think of an idea for a story, offer some suggestions
(a spoiled kid lost at the mall, a businessman locked in the restroom at a football sta-
dium, and so on). Often a student will not like your suggestions, which encourages
the student to think of his or her own idea.
THE PROPHECY
Skills Focus: to develop a strong plot
Assignment: Write a story in which a character hears a prediction about his or her future.
This prediction could come from a variety of sources—a fortune cookie, a fortune teller, or a horo-
scope. The story should involve how this character reacts to and handles the prediction.
For this assignment, remind students to describe things very well. Tell them to focus on letting the
reader see people, places, objects, and situations vividly. A reader, for example, should not just see
a piece of paper but a particular piece of paper—one that looks like it has some history behind it.
Remind students to create a sense of mystery as they write. Predictions, you might tell them, usu-
ally involve love, money, family, and/or work.
Warm Up: Ask students why people seek predictions about their futures in the first place.
What makes someone want to know what is coming? Tell them they should think about what is
happening in the life of the main character before he or she receives the prediction; this might
become a part of the story.
Follow Up: Talk to students about the use of a prophecy as a plot device. In classical drama,
characters like Sophocles’ Oedipus often try to run from prophecies, especially if they don’t like
what they’ve heard. For instance, Oedipus hears that he will kill his father, so he leaves home to
avoid this. Shakespeare’s Macbeth hears that he will be king, and this makes him rush to his
future. Huck Finn hears in a “reading” from Jim that his missing and very dangerous father is near-
by and is contemplating how to get Huck’s money. Huck then “sells” his money to Judge Thatcher
to protect it.
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CHILDREN’S STORYBOOK
Skills Focus: to focus on plot and to write with a specific audience in mind
Assignment: Write and illustrate a children’s story that a four or five year old would love to
read. First, come up with your story; think up a good plot. Then, copy it onto blank pages, mak-
ing room for illustrations.
Explain to students that their pictures can fill in some of the details, but children love to hear
wonderful words, too, so they should pick interesting words but ones children would understand.
You might want to hint about some story lines to them: a journey, a lost object, looking for an
answer to a question, a mystery of some kind, and so on.
Students who don’t wish to illustrate their stories could cut out pictures from magazines.
Follow Up: A natural follow up for this is to have students read their stories to a kindergarten
or first-grade class (if they share a school building). Or they could read to each other. Finally, if
your class has been working hard and needs a luscious treat, have them bring in their favorite chil-
dren’s books from when they were small to read aloud.
NIGHTLIFE
Skills Focus: to establish a setting
Assignment: Write a story of at least three or four paragraphs about the secret nightlife of
something in your home. You might write about inanimate objects which, unbeknownst to
humans, are actually alive, or about real creatures or invented ones. Invent a whole world that we
humans know nothing about. The reader should learn how the night begins, develops, and ends.
Encourage students to be lavishly imaginative here. They could imagine that a set of objects comes
to life at night, such as tools in the basement, dirty clothes in the hamper, or silverware in the
drawer. They might make up some creatures. Tell students to explain why we humans never see
this nightlife. Urge them to think about all the things and animals in their homes. Ask them to
think about how certain objects seem to have a personality or even a sense of gender; for example,
a fork might seem different from a spoon to them.
Warm Up: Have students close their eyes and picture the room or rooms in their houses where
their stories will take place. What are their homes like late at night? What do they sound like
when everyone is asleep? Encourage students to consider beginning with descriptions of the hous-
es before the secret nightlives begin.
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Follow Up: Students may enjoy hearing portions of The Borrowers by Mary Norton, and cer-
tainly they will enjoy reading aloud their pieces. Ask them to discuss night as a time in story-
telling. What kinds of things take place at night? Also, why is it that some objects seem to have
human qualities? Why do we see things this way?
Teaching Tip
This assignment does not strictly fit in the realm of developing prose-writing ability,
but it is relevant to prose skills. Students can gain some sense of the power of
words from this assignment and learn that there are many ways to tell a story.
Discussion: This assignment is a great time to bring up the difference between poetry and
prose. Have students look up these words as part of their homework or do it informally in class.
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MYSTERY EGG
Skills Focus: to write with a particular audience in mind
Assignment: Write a story that revolves around the discovery and handling of a strange,
unusual-looking egg. Before you begin writing, decide on the audience for the story: a child you
know, your mom or dad, a sibling, your best friend, Grandma or Grandpa, or someone else!
Emphasize to the students that their audience will effect the kind of language they choose to use:
parents will enjoy something different than young children, and best friends might like something
that makes parents roll their eyes. Also, remind them to pay attention to details especially descrip-
tive details about the egg’s size, shape, color and markings. And they should create suspense; as
they begin, they should make readers curious to know what, if anything, will make the egg hatch
and what is inside the egg.
Teaching Tip
Encourage students to take a little time to imagine the egg, though some may have
an idea right away, so don’t stop anybody who is immediately inspired to write.
Follow Up: Because this is written with an audience in mind, students could polish their sto-
ries and present them as gifts. Students could revise, perfect the spelling and punctuation, design a
cover and give their story as a holiday or birthday present.
William Styron wrote a wonderfully funny story called “Benjy” that you might want to read to stu-
dents some time after you complete the project.
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The stories will mostly be dialogue, although students can add some descriptive or expositional
passages. The effect here may be comic if the students like; encourage them to create an “odd cou-
ple” of some sort. Students should imagine very precise but different individuals who would be
likely to use language in ways distinct from each other. Insisting that students resolve the argu-
ment will require them to bring their stories to some kind of satisfying end—at least for the reader.
Urge them to write at least two pages. This assignment will take a minute or two to explain; you
might consider trying it yourself first, just to be sure you understand how it works.
Warm Up: Review punctuation of dialogue and how to place the speaker tags in different sec-
tions of a sentence.
Franky said, “I hate liver and onions.”
“You don’t hate it,” said his mother. “You just may not like it.”
“Oh no. I hate it, all right,” he said.
“Franklin, if you don’t stop saying that this instant,” she said, “there will be no soccer
practice for you.”
Follow Up: Have students read aloud their work. Discuss the relationship between sentence
length and character. How do we speak when we are in certain moods, for example, when we’re
tired and upset or full of energy and angry? or when we’re being sarcastic?
FINDERS KEEPERS
Skills Focus: to use play structure
Assignment: Using dramatic form, write a scene for a play in which something is hidden or
lost. Your characters are in search of whatever the thing is.
After students think this assignment over for a minute or two, generate a discussion about what
questions they might need to consider. First of all, who is in the scene? Where is it taking place?
What is missing and what happened to it? Finally, encourage students to imagine each character
individually; they should not all sound alike.
Warm Up: Show examples of a play’s format on the board. Point out that each character’s name
is capitalized. Stage directions appear in parentheses.
JEFFREY: If I don’t find my soccer ball, Mom won’t let me go to practice. (He looks under his
bed.)
MICHAEL: Are you sure you didn’t eat it with all those cookies?
JEFFREY: Ha ha. (Jeffrey sticks out his tongue.)
MICHAEL: I’ll see you after practice. (Looking smug, he puts on his cleats.)
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Follow Up: Encourage students to read aloud or even perform their scenes. They may need to
make copies of their scenes if there are more than two characters. Performing their scenes will help
students hear their writing. Some may be surprised; a character may sound flat, or the audience
might laugh at something unexpected. Tell them that a playwright often does not know if a scene
works until he or she hears it read aloud.
CONFESS!
Skills Focus: to write a first-person narrative
Assignment: Write a first-person narrative in which a character confesses to having done
something. It could be something major, like a crime, or something minor. The story can be in the
form of a letter, a testimony, or a monologue, or you can imagine that the character is confessing
to someone such as a police officer, a family member, or a religious leader.
The nature of the confession is up to the students, but remind them that it does not have to be a
crime per se. It can simply be something about which the character feels conflicted, such as being
in love. The narrator might be very eager to confess or might be more reluctant, but by the end of
the story, the reader should know what the character did and why. Delaying the confessions will
very likely result in more suspenseful stories. Encourage students to conceive unexpected narra-
tors; suggest they develop characters who are completely unlike themselves.
Follow Up: Many stories have a confessional quality. In fact St. Augustine’s Confessions influ-
enced the early writers of novels. Ask students if they can think of stories or movies with a
confessional quality. You might want to read them some Edgar Allan Poe. Much of his work, “The
Cask of Amontillado,” for example, has a strongly confessional quality. And students will certainly
enjoy sharing their own stories.
STREAM OF CONSCIOUSNESS
Skills Focus: to develop a voice
Assignment: Write about anything on your mind until I tell you to stop. Do not think about
paragraphing, spelling, or grammar. Write as quickly as you can; try to set down on paper every-
thing that you’re thinking.
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Assure students that they don’t need to make transitions or establish topics. They can pick one of
the sentences below to start with, and if they get stuck, they can select another one. Or if students
get stuck, they should keep repeating their last word until a new thought or image comes to them.
Write the following prompts on the board:
I always remember . . .
I always think about . . .
I hate . . . I wish I could . . .
I dreamt last night about . . .
I’m feeling . . .
Note: The role of this assignment is very intentionally to free students from structured writing
assignments and to experience generating ideas and language in a freewheeling way. It will remind
students of how much they can write and acquaint them with how rich their interior worlds are.
Give students about thirty minutes to write.
Follow Up: Ask students to discuss what kinds of things they wrote about. Lead them in a dis-
cussion of how writing in itself can reveal our thoughts and teach us about ourselves. It also can
bring us to interesting ideas and images for stories and poems. Finally, looking at the raw material
created by doing stream-of-consciousness writing, discuss this kind of expressive writing. How
does it differ from editing and shaping a piece? How much should a writer edit his or her thoughts
and words while writing? What is the danger if a writer is too careful about what he or she says?
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Warm Up: On the board write strong, complex topic sentences for two different paragraphs.
One paragraph is for the principal, the other is for a student. The topic could be, for example, the
food in the school cafeteria or the color of the school walls.
AN ESSAY ON MEANING
Skills Focus: to revise an essay
Assignment: In a well-developed essay of roughly four paragraphs, agree or disagree with the
following statement by the Spanish writer Cervantes: “Honesty is the best policy.” In the body of
your essay, use examples from your own life or from literature, history, or current events to explain
your thinking.
This assignment has three steps as follows:
1. Give the quotation to students to think about as homework. Ask them to jot down notes.
Explain that they are going to write on the topic the next day.
2. Have students write in class on this topic for thirty to forty-five minutes. Remind them that they
should take a clear stand in this essay: their perspectives should be clear in their introductions.
Students should explain their responses; giving clear examples here is very important. They should
write quickly and clearly.
3. For homework, have students edit their own essays using red pens. Then they should recopy
the essays, correcting all errors. Encourage students to alter their arguments if necessary. They
should hand in the first and second drafts the next day.
Follow Up: This is an assignment you want to mark carefully. After they hand in their para-
graphs, ask students how many of them found real errors in their first drafts. Assure students
that this is normal: when writing quickly, we do make mistakes. Revising allows us to improve
our work dramatically; nearly all fine writers have to rework significantly before their writing
really shines.
PLEASE CHANGE
Skills Focus: to write a formal letter
Assignment: In a formal letter addressed to an individual or organization, write about some-
thing that needs changing. Explain not only what should change and why but also how it should
change. Give some suggestions.
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Suggest to students that they can make this letter about any number of things: striking sports play-
ers or organizations, city ordinances concerning young people, television programming, national
affairs, or the rising price of cheeseburgers or toys. Tell students that in a formal letter, the purpose
of the letter should be clear from the first paragraph.
Warm Up: To help students understand proper form, go over the A Formal Letter reproducible
(page 64) with them. Point out what information is included in a letter, why it is there, and where
everything properly goes. If they write their letters on notebook paper, have them skip a couple of
lines between the different elements: heading, inside address, salutation, text, closing, and signa-
ture. Stress that their letters should look clean and approachable. Finally, before students begin,
ask them to explain why a writer should use formal English in a business letter.
Follow Up: You might encourage students to send their letters, in which case you might want
to have them do final drafts based on your comments. Teach them how to address a letter. Some
students will probably receive responses, which will reinforce the idea that writing is useful in the
real world.
Note: Often students who have trouble with spatial/visual work will have trouble sorting out
how to place things on the page; they may need some monitoring. Have younger students or those
especially inexperienced with language copy the letter on the reproducible on page 64 before they
do the assignment.
JOB APPLICATION
Skills Focus: to write a letter for a job
Assignment: Imagine that you’re applying for a job. For the purposes of this assignment, use
a pencil to write a letter of inquiry. Explain which job you’re interested in, describe your qualifica-
tions, and list your references. Give some thought in advance as to how you will paragraph.
Possible jobs and addresses:
Assistant camp counselor
Apply to:
Mabel Pearson,
Director Long Pine Camp
Route 1
Littletown, Wyoming 86130
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Summer babysitter: Apply to:
Mr. and Mrs. Friendly
Carson Road
Santa Fe, New Mexico 60329
Bus boy: Apply to:
Kwame Lewis, Manager
Big Plates Restaurant
49126 Oyster Drive
Sloughton, Louisiana 01293
Deejay: Apply to:
Joanna Justice, President
Spinning Discs 1111
Sweetbriar Drive
Detroit, Michigan 02938
Have students select one of the jobs above or let them make up their own. Tell them that they can
invent the particulars as long as they use letter form accurately and write formally. Remind stu-
dents to sign their letters!
Follow Up: Before students hand in their letters, divide the class into pairs. Partners should
look over each other’s letters and check form, clarity, and spelling. They should make suggestions
to each other, but first remind them to offer advice tactfully. Students should then use these sug-
gestions to make any necessary changes in their letters. Let them know that when they need to
make a good impression, they should let someone with an informed eye check their work.
= name of restaurant
= location
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= atmosphere
= service
= dress code
= type of food and its quality
= particularly good or bad dishes
= price range
= level of formality
= your rating
Warm Up: This assignment integrates many skills, so use a two-part warm-up.
1. Focus students’ attention on the list of elements that the review must include and talk about
how they might organize their reviews. Some of the information is simply data: should they lead
with that? Would that make an interesting opening? After you establish that the writer has an orga-
nizational dilemma, show them one solution many critics use: they create a box of useful facts that
contains location, price range, dress code, type of food, and rating. This makes important informa-
tion easily accessible and allows the writer to critique the food and service in the text of the
review.
2. Discuss with students how the tone of a publication would influence how they write. A review
in a magazine for teenagers would probably be different from a review in a major newspaper. As a
class, come up with a list of different publications for which students could imagine writing
restaurant reviews. They could also create imaginary publications; for example, maybe someone
wants to write for an imaginary magazine called Snap for kids or teenagers who love music and
dance, or for Vault, a magazine for middle school gymnasts. In addition to tone, students need to
think about diction. Given the publication, should their language be formal or informal?
Note: While it may be tempting to force students to write their reviews using formal diction,
keep in mind that a good part of what you are doing here is educating them about the idea of
audience and employing language appropriate to a given occasion. When students actually go
through that process of writing for an audience, they begin to internalize the concept of diction.
Follow Up: Consider making a booklet of these reviews (this idea is more practical if you and
your students have access to computers). You could also make a website with them.
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Assignment: Write a four- or five-paragraph essay about something that you believe needs
improvement. Propose changes. You could write about your hometown, a sport, school, television,
food, a restaurant, a store, main street, and so on. Your subject should be something you really
care about.
Warm Up: Talk first about the introduction. By the end of the first paragraph, the reader
should know what the problem is and, in general, the solutions the student will address in detail
in the essay. On the board, outline the probable course of such an essay as shown below. Have stu-
dents copy the outline. You want to steer them to the following idea: The human mind likes things
to make sense. In their essays, they will simply be explaining problems and how to fix them.
I. What’s wrong and what can be done
II. The full scope of the problem, how it came about and why it is so bad
III. The solution
IV. An additional solution (optional paragraph)
V. Conclusion: Why it’s so important to solve this problem, what’s at stake,
and why there’s room for hope
Follow Up: Have students revise their essays based on your comments. In your comments,
pay close attention to their transitions.
HALLOWEEN REFLECTION
Skills Focus: to organize and outline ideas
Assignment: In a five-paragraph essay, discuss the merits of three kinds of candy. In the body
of your paper, devote a full paragraph to a description of each kind of candy. How does it taste?
What does it look like? Is it colorful? How long does it last? Be very detailed: we should see and
taste the candy. Make the reader want a piece! In the conclusion of your essay, and not before,
identify which candy is best.
This frivolous topic uses a formal approach and works especially well when candy is king: at
Halloween. Tell students to describe lavishly, even to the point of absurdity if they want, as long as
they keep their language formal. The reader should be able to visualize and experience how each
piece of candy looks and tastes.
Warm Up: Have students begin by outlining this on a sheet of paper. Have them look at The
Essay on page 56. In the outline, they should order their discussion. Ask students to give some
thought to where they should discuss the best candy. Should it come first? last? in the middle?
Emphasize that there is no right answer.
Note: You may find that some students may not want to write about candy, although many will
54
find this fun. If they want to write about three sports, three cookies, three video games or three
whatever, consider allowing a change of focus; this won’t violate the purpose of the assignment.
55
The Essay
A formal essay or composition is a focused, developed discussion of a well-defined
topic, which is called a thesis. An essay explains and validates your thesis with convinc-
ing examples.
An essay, like a paragraph, has an orderly shape. It has three parts—a beginning, a mid-
dle, and an end:
Essay Structure
I. Introductory Paragraph
This paragraph contains the thesis.The thesis defines your topic and tells what you
will cover in the essay.
II. Body:The Internal Paragraphs
In these paragraphs, you explain and give details to support your thesis. Like a lawyer,
you need to give evidence to back up your thesis, and you need to provide it in an
orderly manner.
III. Concluding Paragraph
In this paragraph, you wrap up your discussion and leave the reader feeling satisfied by
the conclusion.
3) Organize your ideas in an outline. Following an outline will keep your essay
focused.
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Name __________________________________________ Date __________________
1) First rewrite it to make it less repetitive. Use pronouns where you can and play
with sentence variety. Make sure the sentences are not the same length. Combine
sentences if you wish.
Add details to make the story come to life. Create a sense of suspense
and make the writing more interesting.
The house stood on Adams Street. All the children played there each day.
The children liked to ride their bikes there.The children liked to skateboard
there.The children liked to play kickball there.The children sometimes
fought. Sometimes they played together well. One day the children discov-
ered something scary on Adams Street.
57
Name __________________________________________ Date __________________
58
Playing With Sentences (continued)
6. Some sentences use an if/then construction. Sometimes the word then is implied.
If the river rises, then the farm will be flooded.
If we hurry, we won’t be late.
Write a sentence that begins,“If the time comes when there is no more
television”
59
Name __________________________________________ Date __________________
60
Father on Black Ice (continued)
is he talking about?
“Watch.” He drills with
the auger and shavings
of ice twist
up, clear or white in
the sun. Not black. My life
is heaven and hell and
I am almost
twelve and there are fish
in the dark like backwards
stars below us. Can
they breathe?
What do they
eat? What makes it
worthwhile to go
on living in
such circumstances?
Are there weeds
to brush against?
Sleek, bright, even,
under the lid of shadow,
long and tapering,
maybe shifting to
ease the doubts
or kinks in their drowsing
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Father on Black Ice (continued)
62
Father on Black Ice (continued)
it snaps. Feel it
go? It is cruel
what they feed us,
that we eat. “You will not always
be so unhappy.”
He promises.
I want him to
say more, want
to ask him, “Who am
I to you, now
you have pulled me
from the hole
and let me live?”
—Nancy White, from Sun, Moon, Salt
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A Formal letter
2468 Blippity Blop Road
Car City, Ohio 09861
(heading)
I have noticed that all of the stop signs in my town and in every town are red. I
recognize that this is the traditional color, but I would like to say, with all due
respect, that we in America, here in the new millennium, could use a change of
pace. I would like to propose that you change the color of the stop sign to a color
most people enjoy: purple. Purple is a vivid color like red, but it is prettier.With a
ellow border and yellow lettering, I am sure the signs would be just as easy to see
and would also be more attractive by daylight. Since we have to see the signs so
often, perhaps they should be nicer for people to look at. (text)
Silly Soundmaker
64