Process Writing Class

Put a tiny piece of paper with your name on it into a basket.

Teacher assigns a scribe, and both teacher and scribe take part in the circle of naming things: Scribe writes what everyone likes to get as a present: book, plane ticket, Wii, camera, laptop, chocolate,  printer (and three “passes” — people aren’t required to speak).

Go around again. It doesn’t have to be a physical present; can be emotional. Second round: a nice day, security, contentment, heater, love, new sweater, movie, reliable friend, peaceful country (Iraqi), chat with friends, better handwriting, better alarm clock. Several passes again.

[A large yellow-abdomened spider just tried to crawl onto my arm. It soon found itself airborne, but that didn’t phase it.]

Then we had to write a letter to one of our classmates in this format: Dear _____, I would like to give you _____ because _____. Yours, ____

I wrote to Moloko telling her I’d like to get her a singing engagement at Carnegie Hall because she loves to sing for people. I received a letter from a visitor to the class who wanted to give me a new digital camera because mine broke last week. I don’t know how she knew that! [Oh: she didn’t. She just made that up.]

Then we had to write a thank-you letter in this format: Dear _____, Thank you so much for ______. It was (is) ______ because _______. Sincerely, _____

In a normal class she’d have students return the name to a bucket as soon as they’d finished writing a letter and pick out another name to give a present to. Likewise, every person who gives a present needs a thank-you letter in reply.

  • Penny Ur: Grammar Practice Activities
  • Zero Prep: If she had one book to take, it would be this.

Format: letter-writing

The final phase would be to pick your favorite present and tell the others what it was and why you liked it.

Stages of Process Writing

  1. Brainstorm ideas/think
  2. Pair share, ask questions
  3. Reflect/write, add details
  4. First draft: focus on topic sentence
  5. Peer editing: questions S <—> S
  6. Second draft (based on peer feedback). Revisions.
  7. Peer editing (mechanics, grammar, syntax, vocabulary)
  8. Third draft (based on peer edits). Give to teacher
  9. Final draft
  10. Publish

My favorite object:

  • How/when/why did you get this object?
  • What does it look like?
  • What does it feel like when you touch it?
  • Why is it important to you?
  • What memories does it bring to you?

[Ginna note: give people enough time to think of something they care about truly, because they’ll be writing a lot about it.]

Peer review: First, state to each other what was the purpose of your paper? What were you trying to tell your readers? You’re not looking at content any more, but grammar, punctuation [you don’t say “put a comma here”; you say “punctuation.” You don’t say “use past tense here”; you say “tense.” Etc. It’s not our job to correct but only to note. Sarah just circles it when she reviews a paper one-on-one, but you can use this set of correction symbols:

Agr = subject/verb or pronoun agreement

Then read each other’s papers.

Peer feedback: Underline one or two parts you liked best. Would you suggest more details? Is there anything you don’t understand?