I decided to steal Carol’s book and read Reviving the Essay by Gretchen Bernabei, which offered many practical strategies to “teach structure without formula.” Not to sound like a broken record but as I’ve said before the hardest thing for me to teach is writing and it is also what we as teachers get the least help with (unless we go looking for it). My students write excellent “ This is what I am going to tell you about…” essays but taking them beyond this structure was frustrating not only them but me as well. Barnebei has developed strategies that both my students and I can be comfortable with.
The best strategy that Bernabei offers for revision and growth is to show students multiple essays by the same writer. We often show examples of good writing and bad writing but they rarely come from the same writer. This results in a student seeing themselves as either a good or a bad writer. Every writer, professional or beginner, can be a good or bad writer. Students need to see that sometimes they will write something amazing, and other times they might just write something crummy. Either way a student is never always a good or bad writer.
In addition to this strategy, Bernabei provides multiple ways of including “thick description” into our lesson plans. Dialogue, action, and thoughts are possible paper starters and work well with struggling writers, but Bernabei takes this process step further. She suggests using lyrics, thoughts, images, anecdotes etc. to create interesting leads. She also supplies ways to use these items as structure in a piece of writing: framing, ribboning, weaving, echoes, and embedding. This creates papers that move away from writing pieces that have a great lead and then fizzle. This structure continues throughout the entire piece.
Questions:
1. What are some ways that you encourage your writers to believe they can write well even if they struggle?
2. How have you tackled balancing creativity and structure in the writing your students create?
Tags:
Views: 38
© 2025 Created by Kimberly Cuevas.
Powered by