Teaching the art of writing
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Christine Carrillo
Holding a card with the word “our” written in puffy paint on it,
Susan Thompson asked her first-grade students to tell her what word
it was -- a perplexing question for the 20 students sitting on the
floor around her.
As some students shouted out their answers and others waited
patiently with their hand in the air, the perplexing problem
surfaced.
The 6- and 7-year-old students confused “our” with “are,” which is
an error that often slips into the writings of persons at nearly any
age.
The students were not discouraged. They kept reading the expert
words in their teacher’s book and continued with the new Nancy Fetzer
writing program that was instituted at Ralph E. Hawes Elementary
School in Huntington Beach last October.
Using “recipe cards,” which contain examples of nouns, verbs and
prepositions, and “power writing notebooks,” they each tried to build
sentences that contained a subject, predicate, time and place.
“We’re trying to get them to write one powerful sentence,”
Thompson said. “They’re really learning how to write more
spectacularly. They’re learning how to write more flowery.”
The idea of the writing program is to provide students with a
strong grasp of the basics of writing so that subsequent teachers can
simply build upon their students’ knowledge year after year.
And do so in a way that best suits them.
“It’s real friendly,” she said. “It’s teacher friendly and student
friendly.”
Learning to start each sentence with a green light, which connotes
a capital letter, and end with a red light or punctuation mark,
students quickly learn about the mechanics of a sentence without
having to deal too much with the grammatical jargon that will
eventually seep into their English lesson plans.
Creating sentences like, “A bird is running at the gas station at
night,” the students had to work together in a Mad Lib-type format to
create the “powerful sentences” the program aims to teach.
After warming up with the group activities the students were then
told to go to their notebooks and come up with a sentence of their
own along with a colorful illustration.
But there was one more thing they had to remember about writing,
and Thompson was sure to ask her students what it was.
“You need to check if you have any mistakes and then you have to
go to Miss Thompson,” 6-year-old Nicole Jenkins said.
Even these first-graders know that writing requires editing.
* CHRISTINE CARRILLO is a news assistant with Times Community
News. She can be reached at (714) 965-7177 or by e-mail at
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