The Spark Creativity Teacher Podcast | ELA
Education:How To
I'll never forget the "C" I got on my first English paper in college. I was walking across the quad in the warm eucalyptus-scented California air when I confidently pulled my paper from my bag to look at the comments. The day suddenly slid into grayscale as I saw my grade.
After a lifetime of "A" and "Great job" written at the bottom of every paper, fresh from winning the English award at my high school awards night, I was totally unprepared for the many, many scrawled notes about the problems in my paper.
I walked into class the next day in a daze, and listened to my professor as he went into a terrifying but effective rant. Apparently I wasn't the only freshmen to confidently turn in a paper that wasn't nearly complex enough.
His speech has stuck with me.
"Your rough draft," he said at one point. "Is a chair."
He scrawled an incredibly messy chair on the whiteboard for emphasis.
"And you have to take that chair," he sputtered. "And build a boat!"
We students glanced at each other, a little overwhelmed.
A boat?
Today I want to talk about the chair and the boat, and some of the process that happens in between. Because let's face it, most kids (high school me included) really struggle to understand the work that happens between ROUGH drafts and final drafts. And it's perhaps the most crucial part of the writing process.
The strategy we're going to dive into now, self-editing stations, can really help scaffold editing for your students, saving them from falling into the usual traps, allowing you to intervene on behalf of key writing improvements you're trying to help them make BEFORE they turn in their work, and ultimately, saving your commenting time for only the most important personalized suggestions.
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110: Take Your Writing Workshop Digital (It's Easy), with Amanda Werner
109: How to Make Digital "Magnetic" Poetry Activities
108: Try a Virtual Travel Research Project
107: Virtual Discussion Problems? Try this
106: Doing a Podcast Project? Let me be your Guest Speaker
105: How to Creatively use T.V. Clips in ELA
104: Create a Hyperdoc in 6 Easy Steps
103: Off Screen Activities for Remote Learning in ELA
102: Taking your Literary Food Truck Festival Digital
101: How to Run Virtual Literature Circles
100: How to Run a Virtual First Chapter Friday
099: How to Get your Students listening to Podcasts, with Ashley Bible
098: 5 Flexible ELA Unit Ideas
097: A Flexible Plan for Blended Learning
096: Summer Priorities in the Face of Fall Uncertainties, with Angela Watson
095: Remote Teaching: Grading, Discussion, and Building Community with Marie Morris and Amanda Cardenas
094: Project Lit, Sketchnotes, and Classroom Design with Laquisha Hall
093: A Plan for your First Fall Unit in ELA
092: Distance Learning: A Creative End to the Year
091: Project-Based-Learning in the City, with Laura Deisley of Lab Atlanta
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