Few sources available today offer writing teachers such succinct, practice-based help—which is one reason why 30 Ideas for Teaching Writing was the winner of the Association of Education Publishers 2005 Distinguished Achievement Award for Instructional Materials. These ideas originated as full-length articles in NWP publications (a link to the full article accompanies each idea below). Table of Contents: 30 Ideas for Teaching Writing Use the shared events of students' lives to inspire writing. Establish an email dialogue between students from different schools who are reading the same book. Use writing to improve relations among students. Help student writers draw rich chunks of writing from endless sprawl. Work with words relevant to students' lives to help them build vocabulary. Help students analyze text by asking them to imagine dialogue between authors. Spotlight language and use group brainstorming to help students create poetry. Ask students to reflect on and write about their writing. Ease into writing workshops by presenting yourself as a model. Get students to focus on their writing by holding off on grading. Use casual talk about students' lives to generate writing. Give students a chance to write to an audience for real purpose. Practice and play with revision techniques. Pair students with adult reading/writing buddies. Teach "tension" to move students beyond fluency. |