Hello, missed colleagues! :)
A few questions I'd like to throw out--
1) What are the benefits of freewriting as a tool for pre-writing/discovery? Do I believe in it enough to make it a feature of my course?
2) Are shorter reader response type writings valuable or is it just busywork that interrupts students authentically engaging with literature?
3) Do you explicitly model skills for students often? How?
These questions popped up for me as I read Cynthia D. Urbanski's Using the Workshop Approach in the High School English Classroom: Modeling Effective Writing, Reading, and Thinking Strategies for Student Success. How is that for a long title? In the flurry of reading I've been doing lately for curriculum development, this book was a stand-out. Urbanski helped me address those questions and left me with lots of other ideas to implement (along with the zillions from ISI).
I'm always drawn toward workshop approaches in the classroom, but it can be tough to really envision how it works day to day. Urbanski describes her methods and rationale so effectively and in such an approachable way that it actually seems plausible (and exciting!). I felt, while reading, that I was getting a peek into a thoughtful and effective teacher's journal.
A description from the publisher:
This practical guide addresses the daily running and practice of a workshop-based classroom, using research and the author’s own experiences to illustrate how to establish a workshop that:
A good portion of the book is dedicated to what modeling effective reading, writing, and thinking actually look and sound like in the classroom. Urbanski offers example dialogues that don't ring fake (a pet peeve of mine in other similar texts).
As for freewriting and how ready I am to advocate for it, Urbanski makes a really compelling argument for freewriting's value. She explains that it reinforces for developing writers (and seasoned writers) that mistakes are permissible and expected, that false starts happen and can lead to good starts, and that it takes time for magic to happen.
Having just read Nancie Atwell's The Reading Zone (see my workshoppy leanings?), I have that nagging feeling that I'm ruining literature for kids if I push too much read and respond, but Urbanski suggests that done correctly, reader response oppurtunities allow for better long writings later because students have had the opportunity to process and consider beforehand, and it's a relatively non-threatening way to build proficiency.
This text includes techniques for grading, conferencing, and using student writing as literature in the classroom. I think that's what struck me most about the book--that the tips were practical enough (and presented in a straight-forward way without excessive fluffy lingo) that I could see implementing the ideas myself. I left the ISI with the view that modeling is so important to a successful classroom (after seeing modeling working in action and supported by the literature), but it's always nice to have a resource to turn to for "how-to."
On a total side note, it's not a specifically "writing" text, but my other recent fave is Sheridan Blau's The Literature Workshop: Teaching texts and their readers. If you're looking for some modeling as to how to encourage effective interaction with challenging texts (without having to be a know-it-all yourself), sneak a peak at that one! I'll be shocked if anyone makes it this far into my rambling. ;)
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