On Writing Workshop
To teach writing to grade 7s and 8s, I use Writing Workshop, an instructional style invented by American middle school teacher Nancie Atwell, who outlined the strategy in the hugely influential In the Middle, a book I read in teacher's college. In the Middle is all over the Ontario Language Arts Curriculum.
These are the basics of writing workshop:
These are the basics of writing workshop:
- Students select their own topics for writing and their own books for reading.
- Throughout the year, they write and read in a variety of genres, about a variety of topics, for a variety of audiences.
- The teacher does not provide prompts for writing, does not set hard deadlines, and does not assign books.
- Conference with students one-on-one, daily.
- Respond to student writing and provide editing suggestions.
- Show students examples of excellent writing.
- Share his/her own writing with students.
- Teach mini-lessons.
- Produce at least three to five pages of rough draft each week and bring at least two pieces of writing to completion every six weeks.
- Produce, by the end of the year, a finished piece in the following areas: short story, three to five poems/songs, a profile of local citizen or an op-ed piece or essay about an issue that matters to them, a book review, and a memoir.
- Attempt publication.