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Entries in teaching writing (18)

Thursday
Feb182010

10 Free Online Courses for Writing Teachers

This is a second post from education writer Karen Schweitzer. Karen is the About.com guide to Business School. She also writes about online degree programs for OnlineDegreePrograms.org.

 

 

Taking writing courses can help writing teachers become better writers, mentors, and readers. There are several free university level writing courses that can be taken online. Credit is not available for any of the courses and degrees are not awarded, but the opportunity to build new skills is undeniable. Here are 10 self-paced writing courses to explore in your spare time.

 

Creative Writing Course - The University of Utah's Department of English offers a creative writing course that covers fiction, poetry, playwriting, and creative non-fiction. The course is designed to provide general information about creative writing and improve writing skills.

 

Short Fiction Course - This short fiction course consists of pre-recorded class content from a writing course at the College of DuPage. You will listent to readings of several pieces of short fiction (The Necklace, A Rose for Emily, The Rocking Horse Winner, and The Chrysanthemums) as well as discussion on each story to facilitate understanding of the short story form.

 

Poetry Course - The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) provides a free course on reading and writing poetry. The course includes assignments, recorded poetry readings, and reading recommendations.

 

Advanced Writing Seminar - This post-graduate seminar, also from MIT, explores different types of writing. The course includes lecture notes, a full set of assignments, and videos of student presentations. From the course description: "The class is an opportunity to write, review, rewrite and present a point of view both orally and in written form. "

 

Prose Fiction Course - This Open University course focuses on different ways of approaching prose fiction. The course is designed to help students learn how to read and analyze writing at the university level.

 

Screenwriting Course - Author and screenwriter Steve Barnes provides a slightly modified version of the nine-week screenwriting course he used to teach at the University of California-Los Angeles. The course includes both instruction and assignments.

 

Literature in English - This course from the University of California-Berkeley surveys major works in Anglo-American literature and includes lectures on close reading. The course is available in audio form and includes 28 lectures.

 

Warwick Writing Challenges - The director of the University of Warwick Writing Programme guides writers through more than 20 creative writing challenges. Each challenge can be played online or downloaded as an mp3 file. These challenges are also great practice for writing students.

 

Writing Tools Workshop - News University offers this course to visitors who register for a free account. The course introduces 50 writing tools to diagnose story problems, improve story architecture, and refine the writing voice. This course is based on Roy Peter Clark's great book Writing Tools which can be purchased from Amazon and is highly recommended for any writer or writing teacher.

 

Text as Property - Available through Connexions, this Rice University course explores ownership, authorship, plagiarism, and associated topics. The course is split into three parts and can be downloaded as a PDF or zip file. As the course introduction asks, do you know when plagiarism is art and when it's a crime?

 

Wednesday
Jan202010

Teaching Writing For the Sciences 

This guest post is contributed by Nancy Simmons, who also writes on the topic of online science degrees. She welcomes your comments at her email address:  nancy.simmons09@gmail.com

Writing on scientific subjects and topics is a little different from creative writing. You don’t really need to be adept at weaving words with skill. In fact, if you can pay attention to detail, if you are knowledgeable enough about the subject, and if you have the dedication for the job, you could easily learn to become a good science writer. Teaching someone to write for science involves training them in the three Cs – good science write-ups must be:

 

  • Concise: You’re not writing 1000 word essays on any random topic; rather, you have the responsibility of stating the facts in a way that is clear and concise. Your writing has to be to the point and not include ramblings about your personal thoughts and opinions. Science is all about facts and there’s no room for romanticism or the abstract in science writing. If you’re asked to write about a rainbow, given a free hand, you would wax eloquent on its many colors and how it signified all that was good and beautiful about life. But a science writer has to strip off the rose-tinted glasses and reduce the colors of the rainbow to what they really are – the dispersal of the light spectrum under certain environmental and atmospheric conditions.
  • Comprehensible: Any science writing course worth its salt will tell you that your writing must be easily understood, even by someone who knows just how to read. For science to reach the masses, it must be put in words and sentences that are simple, straightforward and not complicated. Restrict the use of bombastic words and expressions and stick to when is comprehensive and easily understandable.
  • Correct: And most important of all, science writing must be factually correct. Although all forms of writing must be grammatically correct to be aesthetically pleasing to the senses, when it comes to science writing, the biggest mistake you could make is to get your facts wrong. When you mix up your facts and make errors, your writing is worthless, because science is all about accuracy and preciseness.

 

Teaching a science writing course involves instilling these characteristics in your students’ writing. If they can crack the three Cs, they’re well on their way to becoming good science writers. 

 

Monday
Sep212009

Designing a Writing Program for the At-Risk Student

Five Steps That Can Make a Difference

by Dona Young

The following is a preview of The Writing Teacher free webinar that will be offered on Thursday, September 24 at 2:00 Eastern time. In this webinar, Dona Young will explore teaching solutions for at-risk students. The address for the webinar is here, but this event is now full. Please let us know if you want us to repeat it at a later date. For more from Dona on teaching writing, see The Writer's Tookit.

Even good writers have trouble facing a blank page. To students who consider themselves non-writers, writing presents a constant stream of hurdles: writing feels like an infinite challenge with no tangible road to progress—good writing is a mystery, and confronting the unknown can wear down even the best of us.  

For example, when at-risk students write a paper, feedback about even their most simple errors can reach beyond their understanding. Let’s take "Suzie" as an example. One Friday afternoon at the end of the first week of a writing skills class, Suzie came up to my desk; she was crying. My first thought was, "Oh my gosh, what did I say to hurt Suzie?" So I asked, "Suzie, what’s wrong?"

Suzie responded, "Ms. Young, all through high school I kept hearing about subjects and verbs, and I really never knew what my teachers were talking about until now. I feel so relieved that I finally understand and don’t have to pretend anymore."

Though Suzie was a very bright student, writing had felt overwhelming for her; she didn’t know what to do or where to begin to improve. And clearly her teachers tried to help her, but even the most basic feedback about her mistakes went right over her head. While Suzie could write clear and complete sentences most of the time, she couldn’t write them all of the time; and when she didn’t write correctly, she couldn’t grasp what was wrong. Suzie didn’t understand what a sentence was; as a result, the words "run-on" and "fragment" were illusive to her.

Though Suzie’s sudden insight about her skills was unique, her confusion was not: other students feel equally as lost, and sometimes their teachers feel that way too. Suzie taught me a great deal that afternoon; in fact, whenever I listen to my students, they always teach me important lessons.

One way of listening to students is getting an accurate assessment of their skills and how they feel about learning, so let’s start by taking a look at some formal and informal methods of getting feedback.

1. Become an action researcher: use quantitative and qualitative measures in your design.

  • Qualitative feedback—a constant and steady stream of it—helps us connect with students’ learning needs and their perceptions about learning.

Technology has given us the perfect way to check in with our students regularly. Send your students an e-mail asking them how they are doing in class and requesting that they respond with a process memo. In a process memo, your students discuss what they are learning and how they are feeling about what they are learning.

You can also ask your students to attach a process memo to revisions: they describe their process, their corrections, and what they learned. By doing a process memo, they are discussing the changes that they made in their writing; verbalizing what they are learning helps makes them more conscious of their actions and brings them to a higher level.  

A way to get qualitative feedback from the whole class is by doing a chalkboard evaluation. The simplest way is simply to say, "How are things going?" and then write their comments on the board. A more structured method would be to use the start / stop / continue format. Ask your students:

  • What is going well in class and that you want to continue?
  • What is something that you wish we would start doing?
  • What is something that you wish we would stop doing?

Once again, as students give their feedback, write it on the board. Asking students for their feedback makes them feel more connected and respected.

  • Quantitative measures give us an accurate idea of what our students know and, more importantly, what they don’t know.  

If you don’t already give your students a pretest, consider using one. By giving a post-test at the end of the semester, your students can see their individual improvement and you can see their aggregate improvement. You can use this information to gain insights into your students’ skill profiles.

Once you have their pretest scores, use the Taxonomy of Educational Objectives to gain insight into what your students’ scores mean and how to design your curriculum to meet their needs.   

2. Use the Taxonomy of Educational Objectives to identify learning gaps.

The Taxonomy of Educational Objectives breaks learning objectives into six hierarchical levels: knowledge, comprehension, application, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation.

By using the Taxonomy of Educational Objectives to interpret student skill profiles, we can understand why some students work so hard and make so little progress: when students do not comprehend the basics, higher-level objectives are out of reach, beyond their understanding.

In other words, Suzie could correct mistakes once a teacher pointed them out and coached her, but her pattern of errors continued because she had not learned the basic principle at the core of her mistakes. Suzie knew that she didn’t understand something basic, but she couldn’t verbalize what it was—that is, until she finally learned the core principle that gave her insight and enabled her to fill that specific learning gap. Filling the learning gap also meant that she could now correct a pattern of errors, not just isolated mistakes, which is much more rewarding.

How Suzie felt about writing was also an important element of the learning environment, so let’s take a look at how to address feelings and beliefs that hold students back. 

3. Embrace the feelings and experiences behind the belief, "I can’t write."

Students who can’t write know that they have challenges. They also believe they are unique; in other words, they do not understand that writing is difficult for everyone. As Suzie revealed, she tried to pretend that she understood, hiding it as much as she could from her teachers.

One activity that you can use to open up this dynamic is to have a popcorn discussion about the topic, "What is difficult about writing?" Simply write the question on the board, and then have students share the details about what they find difficult. As students randomly and spontaneously give their responses, write snip-its on the board. Here are some of the responses that you can expect:

getting started, having ideas evaporate before they hit the page, using grammar and punctuation correctly, spelling, writing an introduction, being too wordy, getting off topic, writing a conclusion, and the list goes on.

In addition to opening up the energy in the classroom, everything that your students share gives you insight into how to structure their learning.

As a follow-up, consider giving your students an assignment entitled, "My History as a Writer," in which they give details about how they complete a writing assignment, the kinds of feedback they have received, and so on. Allow students to choose whatever title fits their story. One student asked me if he could use the title, "Why I Don’t Write." Since that time, I have used that title as an example, encouraging students to be honest about their experiences with writing and their feelings about it. (As part of their 1 ½ to 2-page paper, also encourage them to write about what is good about writing after they gotten past the challenging aspects of writing.)  

When your students return to class with their assignment, break them into pairs and have them read their papers out loud to each other. One of the lessons that they glean from this assignment is that they are not alone in their frustrations with writing—everyone has challenges and fears.

Writing at its best is messy, so let’s talk about the process. 

4. Focus on the process.

Writing is a process, but most students do not understand the process because they are overly consumed with the product: getting the grade, meeting the expectations, being good enough, not looking stupid, and getting words down perfectly.

When I ask a group of students, "How many of you try to get the words right in your head before you put them on the page?," generally more than half of them raise their hands. When I ask them if they think that is the right approach, once again the majority generally raise their hands. But in every class, a few students say they write whatever is on their minds, and that’s a good thing.

Clearly, most students do not know the difference between composing and editing—one of the most critical dividing lines to apply on the road to building writing skills.

Though they have learned brainstorming techniques, they may have forgotten about them. After we do a mind-map together, students are excited that they have a tool that captures their ideas on the page before their ideas evaporate. Teaching students the difference between composing and editing is exciting; but after they know the difference, the follow-through to compose freely is up to them (with periodic coaching, of course).

However, editing is another issue altogether, and more of my students have editor’s block than writer’s block. Students who have editor’s block are the ones who finish a draft and don’t know what to correct: they hold their breath as they hand in their papers and then wait for their teacher’s feedback. For students who don’t know how to edit, "first and final draft" seems to be their only option. Let’s talk about editing next.   

5. Teach students to fish: give them editing workshops.

For the sake of argument, let’s identify a traditional approach for teaching writing and then use it as a springboard for comparison. Loosely stated, traditional writing classes focus on writing and revising, not on editing.

When students write essays and papers, teachers give them feedback on their errors; in other words, teachers do the "fishing" for them. That could be because, for the most part, grammar and mechanics are not part of the curriculum—there’s no time, there’s no room, and there’s no fit. Instead, students focus on developing their critical writing skills, receiving individual feedback on errors and structure. If they have questions about grammar or mechanics, they rely on a handbook.

For some students, this approach works like magic, but not for all. And the at-risk student is the one who is likely to fall through the cracks. At-risk students’ papers are often so riddled with errors that individual feedback can feel isolating and defeating. Progress comes slowly—one correction at a time; this approach can also be time-consuming and tedious for the teacher.

However, we can untangle the mystery of writing and bring some fun back into the process by giving a series of workshops that cover basic core principles essential for all writers. By working with a set of principles that builds a common vocabulary about punctuation and other elements of editing, students become better editors. They learn that errors come in patterns, and learning core principles helps eliminate patterns of errors.

Once students can identify and correct their own errors, something shifts. They not only feel more empowered to write, they also mull over their writing more, which may help them gain additional insight into their topic. Some of the common editing elements to cover are the sentence core, conjunctions, punctuation, verbs, pronouns, active voice, and so on.

Thank you for taking the time to be concerned about my "Suzie" and yours. Working with at-risk students is a challenge as well as a reward. Good luck with your writing classes!

Tuesday
Aug252009

New Webinar: Why Can't Suzie Write?

Webinar Title

Why Can't Suzie Write?

Designing a Writing Program for the At-Risk Student

 

Webinar Description

With almost half of all students entering college needing remediation to bring them up to college level reading and writing, many colleges are struggling to support at-risk students.

Dona Young, author of Writing from the Core and Which Comes First, the Comma or the Pause?, will describe the five steps that make a difference in designing a writing program for at-risk students. This webinar will help you structure your remediation programs around proven techniques.

Why Can't Suzie Write is being hosted by Farimah Schuerman of The Writing Teacher and is sponsored by College Starter skills remediation from LearningExpress, LLC and the Wimba Collaboration Suite.

 

Webinar Date:

Thursday, September 24, 2:00 Eastern Daylight Time

 

To Register:

http://www.wimba.com/company/events/1714

 

Cost:

None

 

Monday
May182009

Tired of Being a Red Ink Slave to Corrections?

 

Dennis O'Connor previously wrote How to Introduce the Six Traits for The Writing Teacher, and teaches writing instruction at the University of Wisconsin-Stoudt. In addition to teaching and consulting, he maintains two invaluable websites:
6-Traits Resources
21st Century Information Fluency
 

This article is a preview of a free webinar that Dennis will be providing on June 2, at 2:00 PM Eastern time. If you are interested in attending the webinar, click here.

 

Editing, Not Correcting

How do you respond to the statement: Correcting isn't teaching!

Think about it: all correcting does is make you a better proofreader. Students more often than not ignore your hard work. You as a teacher feel obligated to take out the red pen, while in your heart you know this just isn't working. Don't you see the same errors over and over again? How many times can you check, highlight, underline and explain in the margins that a lot is two words? What else can you do? Isn't every English teacher obliged to correct the work of their students? Isn't that the expectation of parents and administration?

What if you shift the burden of correcting to the student where it belongs? You can do this by integrating editing skills into the writing process from day one. If you establish simple routines by editing every day you can chip a way at the persistent problems without bleeding red ink after school and every weekend.

Many teachers use a daily oral language approach. Let's make it a daily integrated editing exploration approach and stop correcting for our students!

  • Encourage students to re-read their work at every stage of the writing process.

  • Be sure students read their own work aloud.

  • Introduce and use the basic proofreading symbols

  • Start each class with a brief editing sponge or transitional activity.

  • Periodically assemble a list of Editing Essentials to tally the collective skills of the group

  • Collect and organize mentor sentences for modeling usage and grammar concepts

  • Throughout the year, have your students choose e-portfolio samples that document student progress

Edit Anonymous Authentic Samples

Practice editing skills with a variety of anonymous sample sentences or paragraphs in need of specific corrections. Toss the work sheets and find samples from the real world.

  • Use student papers that display the most persistent problems.

  • Find samples in online student publications like KMSoul .

  • Use the NWREL 6-Traits database of student work.

Better yet, use the Notable Sentences Blog a treasure chest of well organized examples. Self proclaimed "sentence stalker" Loren Wolter maintains this remarkable resource. Her blog is a collaboratively build collection of sample sentences organized to address editing essentials like grammar, syntax, figurative language and many other aspects of writing. These model sentences provide powerful teaching examples and pave the way for meaningful, traits inspired, writing process oriented grammar explorations.

Remember: It is far easier to work on a sample than to edit your own work. Provide process practice before you move to self-editing.

Fresh Eyes Edit Better

When it does come time for your students to edit their important pieces, be sure the writing has time to cool.

  • Waiting a few days allows a writer to edit with fresh eyes.

  • Try reading the text backwords to discover invisible errors like repeated articles.

  • Zoom word processed text or switch to a larger font to see the words in a different way.

Focus on One Type of Error at a Time

Here's a professional proofreader's trick: focus on a single specific issue to keep things manageable. If you try to edit for capitalization, punctuation, spelling, and grammar at the same time you overwhelm your weaker editors, causing them to shut down. For younger students, this may mean starting with just end punctuation or capitalization. For older students, the focus may be the rules of dialog or the use of quotation marks.

Integrate Editing into the Writing Process

Students who can revise and edit their own work are on the way to becoming independent writers. Editing helps writers understand their own voice. I'm not advocating a close spell check and punctuation drill early in the process. Too much focus on correctness can stunt fluency. Instead encourage re-reading and reading aloud as part of the writing/editing process. This habit will provide opportunities for students to experiment with usage as they go.

Model by Thinking Out Loud

Often we expect students to 'hear' or 'see' grammatical problems by applying a mental filter based on their previous exposure to language. Not all students have this filter. This is especially true for English language learners or students with learning disabilities. This is why it is so important to model the editing process using the think aloud method.

Put up an sample of your own weak first draft writing on an overhead projector or computer screen. Talk your way through a quick editing process. Broadcast your inner monologue as you tear into the typical problems you want to address. Modeling your own process shows students how important writing is to you and creates a safer learning atmosphere.

Where Will I Find the Time?

If you find yourself saying, I don't have time for one more thing in my curriculum, you'll love Jeff Anderson's insightful article Express Lane Editing Techniques. His field tested methods for modeling editing and re-reading throughout the writing process are practical and effective. Anderson suggests we approach grammar as.."something to be explored, not just corrected".

Anderson is also the author of the books: Mechanically Inclined and Everyday Editing. His books provide a road map for integrating powerful editing practices into the writing process. This isn’t dry academic writing. Anderson comes from the classroom and has a voice and outlook are seasoned by the realities we all face everyday.

I started thinking of how we taught editing at our school. It looked like a series of half-baked attempts to solve a problem that we were not sure how to fix. If I asked my sixth-grade class to correct a sentence riddled with errors, did that show them editing is a powerful tool? When I looked at their faces, I had to admit the answer was a re-sounding, “No!”

Set Parent Expectations

Parents expect red ink. You will be pressured to teach the good old-fashioned way. Still, the good old-fashioned way (correcting) just doesn't work. A thoughtful letter home at the beginning of the year is a good idea. Explain your editing approach. Help parents understand that you value independent correctness. Be consistent and proactive. Periodically, send an editing paragraph home and ask parents to work together with their children on the edit. Consider inviting parents who are strong editors to work in your classroom, and train them to teach editing.

Reality Check on Editing

Finally, accept the fact that not everyone will be a strong editor. A writer with a talent for unique ideas and a powerful voice may be very weak in the conventions of writing. Consider Wilson Rawls, author of Where the Red Fern Grows. Rawls was so ashamed of his spelling, punctuation, and grammar that he burned all his manuscripts and almost gave up writing. Yet who can deny the lyrical genius of his prose?

Writing is too often judged by correctness alone. Do good manners insure fine character? Does polished chrome and a fine paint job create a competitive race car? By balancing conventions (correctness) with the other traits of writing; ideas, voice, organization, word choice, and sentence fluency, you help students find their strengths, while working on their weaknesses.

In the end, by teaching instead of correcting, you arm all of your students with some independent editing skills. You help them on the road to becoming independent writer.

You've done the job. Relax, take the weekend off!

We would like to thank LearningExpress eFolio for sponsoring this blog. eFolio is an automated essay scoring program, which allows teachers to assign more writing practice without the added hours of editing and correcting.

 

Additional Editing Resources:

Teaching and Assessing Writing with the Six Traits (UW-Stout Online Class)

Conventions Homepage (WritingFix)

6-Traits Resources Blog: Jeff Anderson The Write Guy (a guided tour of Anderson's online resources.)

Loren Wolter Notable Sentences...For Imitation and Creation

Resources from Jeff Anderson:

The Write Guy (Jeff Anderson's Website)

Mechanically Inclined (Google Book Preview)

Mechanically Inclined Building Grammar, Usage, and Style into Writer's Workshop

Making editing useful for young Adolescents

Grammar intertwined throughout the writing process: An “inch wide and a mile deep”

Zooming In and Zooming Out:Putting Grammar in Context into Context (PDF)