The Six Write Traits

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The Six Write Traits

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Title: The Six Write Traits


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The Six Writing Traits
  • Kingston Raycraft
  • Four Peaks Elementary
  • School District 98
  • Fountain Hills, Arizona

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Whats a Trait?
  • Traits of a great taco
  • Traits of a good film
  • Traits of good writing

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Which trait should I teach first?
  • Ideas
  • This is the foundational trait.
  • Your idea is your whole reason for writing.
  • All other traits flow out of, and are influenced
    by this one.

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Ideas
  • The Lead Seed
  • Dont say anything. Dont even look up..
  • In this note I will ask you, the teller of this
    bank, to give me all the money in your drawer
  • Traditional lead
  • Introduction Say what we are going to say say
    it and then say it again.
  • A LEAD is NOT a 1 sentence. It is a 0!
  • Leads are seeds that help a writer begin to
    figure out where the plant is growing.
  • Leads are an organizational tool, a motivational
    tool, and a springboard into a piece of writing!

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Leads are magic flashlights that shine down
through a story showing the writer what to put in
and what to leave out.
John McPhee
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Snapshot Leads (0)
  • Create a picture in the readers mind
  • Abraham Lincoln wasnt the sort of man who could
    lose himself in a crowd. After all, he stood 6
    ft. 4 in. tall, and to top it off he wore a high
    silk hat. His height was mostly in his long bony
    legs, and when he sat in a chair he seemed no
    taller than any one else. It was only when he
    stood up that he towered about other men.

Lincoln A Photobiography
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Talking Leads
  • Maybe you want to start with a line or two of a
    dialogue.
  • Where is Papa going with that ax? said Fern to
    her mother as they were setting the table for
    breakfast.

Charlottes Web
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Thinking Leads
Start with a thought inside a character or you.
  • Up until I turned twelve years old the kind of
    friends I had were what youd expect. They were
    my own age more or less. Most of them were born
    here in Serenity along with me. And all of us
    went to the same school together.

Onion John
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Definition of Ideas
  • The content of the piece
  • The heart of the message
  • The main theme
  • What the writer has to say
  • The message

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Writers of Idea should do the following
  • Narrow the topic to something specific
  • Use fresh and original ideas
  • Write from experience
  • Show insight in the writing
  • Make the main idea stand out
  • Use supporting details , 2s
  • Stay in control of the topic
  • Develop the topic in an entertaining way

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Ideas, Content, and Power Writing
  • The title, if there is one, relates to the main
    idea of the paper and hooks the reader. The
    writer sticks to the main idea and leaves out
    details that do not matter.
  • The paper contains enough information to cover
    the subject.
  • Each paragraph contains clear, relevant details
    that develop and support the main idea.
  • The writer chooses details that are interesting,
    important, and informative.

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Wacky Research Reports
  • Try selling something you are studying.
  • To get into the right mindset, read ads from
    newspapers.
  • Come up with details about your subject that are
    appealing. (collect facts)
  • Use research to sell your product.
  • Who are you selling to? What age? What gender?
    What is the product going to do for them?

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For Sale America
Buyer Native Americans
  • Nestled between 2 major oceans and bordered on
    the north and south by 2 friendly countries, the
    United States of America has already been
    subdivided into 48 convenient parcels plus a vast
    track of land near the Arctic Circle and a few
    heavenly islands in the Pacific.
  • Though no longer containing huge herds of
    buffalo to hunt and crystal clear streams and
    lakes to fish in, native peoples will still enjoy
    the vast tracts of farmland and those with Visa
    cards will be able to buy food and manufactured
    items to help them forget the pristine beauty
    which was lost. You can also watch nature
    documentaries on TV.
  • Call 1-800-BUY-IT-BACK today for a free
    appointment

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The Profile Poster
  • A profile is a great way to display your most
    revealing information in a manner that is
    immediately understood.
  • Begin by collecting vital information about your
    subject.
  • Next, take the most striking information and
    place it into a poster form.
  • Be sure to include categories (name, age, etc)

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The Amazon Rain Forest
  • Name Rain Forest
  • Height 50 feet
  • Weight More than you can imagine
  • Favorite Food Sunlight
  • Favorite Drink Water
  • Hobby Providing rich canopy of life for more
    than half of the worlds species.
  • Favorite Saying Burn me up and you will gag!

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Idea Rubric
  • Rating of 1 Beginning

Rating of 3 Developing
Rating of 5 Strong
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Organization
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Definition of Organization
  • It is the internal structure of a piece of
    writing.
  • The order should be logical and effective so that
    the reader hardly thinks about it.
  • It should resemble our Power Paragraphs.
  • There should be an inviting lead that hooks the
    reader.
  • The body should build to an important point by
    using supporting details that fit where they are
    placed.
  • The ideas should be linked together with smooth
    transitions.
  • The conclusion should tie everything together.

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Writers of Organization should do the following
  • Use an inviting lead that hooks the reader.
  • Place supporting details so that they fit.
  • Use logical and effective structure, order, and
    sequence, Power Writing.
  • Use smooth transitions to help the ideas flow
    together.
  • Use a conclusion that gives the reader a sense of
    resolution.
  • Use a conclusion that ties everything together.
    Our restatement 1.

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Organization
  • The organizational pattern makes sense. It is
    easy for the reader to follow along.
  • Each paragraph talks about only one idea.
  • The conclusion ties everything together with a
    final point or summary.
  • The reader isnt left hanging.

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Turning the Knob
  • EyesWhat did things look like?
  • Eyes What were they wearing?
  • Nose What did it smell like?
  • Touch What was the air like?
  • Taste What was in your mouth?
  • Eyes Ears What were they doing?

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Boxes Inside Boxes
It was a very old rug.
torn around the edges with big splotches of white
paint
It smelled of old dog and mildew and when you
walked over it, it scrunched like cellophane
beneath your feet.
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Dont Get Crazy
  • Look for clutter in beginnings of sentences and
    in stories. We all introduce too much.
  • Hunt down and weed out useless flowery
    adjectives.
  • Slice out unnecessary lists of details and focus
    on the telling detail.

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Write Small
  • Big Idea

Small Image
Birthday parties are fun.
Licking the pink frosting off the ends of the
candles
Strobe lights flickering over laughing faces as
the beat pounds on
School dances are strange.
The Holocaust was inhuman.
A mountain of childrens shoes
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Small Writing can be funny!
  • Funny Concept
  • My brother doesnt clean the shower.
  • Funnier Image
  • I hate hair on soap.

Snobby hotels
The toilet paper is folded to make you think
nobody used it. Do they think were that dumb?
Being so bored at the supermarket, I read all of
Sister Fatimas predictions for the end of the
world and Elviss latest itinerary!
Bored waiting in line at the supermarket
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Add setting to the story
  • Setting is a sense of place
  • Whats going around the characters in your story?
  • Where are they standing?
  • Whats the weather like?
  • Is your story taking place in Phoenix or Fountain
    Hills?

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endings
  • The Loop Ending
  • The Surprise Ending
  • The Summary
  • The Happy Ending
  • The Mysterious Ending
  • The Sad but True Ending

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The Loop Ending
  • The loop ending ends at the same place it begins
    and is probably the most popular way to end a
    story. Some childrens books to illustrate this
    are If You Give a Mouse a Cookie by Laura
    Numeroff, Grandfather Twilight by Barbara
    Berger,and Barefoot on the Underground Railroad
    by Pamela Duncan Edwards. Does your story want
    to end the same place it began?

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The Surprise Ending
  • A good surprise ending is not an accident but is
    planned for by a skillful writer. You can trace
    the clues by re-reading the story and looking for
    clues which the writer planted. For example, a
    good mystery story must have a surprise ending
    but you have to have some clue about the real
    villain or the reader will feel tricked. Is your
    story one that wants to throw the reader a curve
    ball in the last inning? If so, try writing a
    surprise ending like these books Earthlets by
    Jeanne Willis, Her Majesty, Aunt Essie by Amy
    Schwarts and The Paperbag Princess, by Robert
    Munsch. The Sixth Sense is another good example.

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The Summary
  • And to round off tonights newscast, here are
    the highlights once again. A summary ending
    repeats the main points of a story trying to tie
    together any loose end. This type of ending works
    well in speeches that are trying to hammer home a
    point or snowballing stories like Dr. Seusss
    Green Eggs and Ham or songs like The twelve Days
    of Christmas which snowballs along to the end.

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The Happy Ending
  • Most fairy tales have happy endings. A happy
    ending such as the one in Cinderella leaves the
    reader with no feeling of sadness. Like a good
    warm blanket it covers us from the cold of life.
    Does it want to end happily, or would it be
    stronger and more real if it ended sadly?

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The Mysterious Ending
  • A mysterious ending leaves a lot to the readers
    imagination. This is the kind of ending that
    leaves a big question mark in the readers mind.
    Do you want to keep the reader guessing? Try
    writing an ending like Lois Lowry does in the
    book The Giver.

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The Sad but True Ending
  • When we read that Charlotte dies at the end of
    Charlottes Web we are sad. But it has to end
    that way. Try saving Charlotte and the story
    loses its power. It becomes a lie. I call this
    the sad but true ending. Does your story need
    to end sadly? Does your happy ending have a false
    ring? If so, you may want to write a sad but
    true ending. Other books include A Bridge to
    Teribithia by Katherine Paterson, Where the Red
    Fern Grows by Wilson Rawls and A Taste of
    Blackberries by Doris Buchanan Smith.

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Organization Rubric
  • Rating of 1 Beginning

Rating of 3 Developing
Rating of 5 Strong
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Voice
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The only thing that really bugs me is when a
student doesnt put his or her personality into
an essay.
College admissions officer commenting on reading
college entry essays.
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Definition of Voice
  • VOICE shows the writers personality.
  • It contains feelings and emotions so that it does
    not sound like an encyclopedia article.
  • The writer should be writing from the heart.
  • The language should bring the topic to life for
    the reader.
  • The voice should be appropriate for the topic,
    purpose, and audience of the paper.

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Writer of Voice should do the following
  • Write honestly and from the heart
  • Share his/her feelings about the topic
  • Speak directly to the reader (without using YOU)
  • Write to be read
  • Use more expression
  • Give the reader a sense of the person behind the
    words
  • Connect with the reader

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Voice
  • Your composition sounds different from everyone
    elses. Its unique.
  • The composition sounds like the writer.
  • The paper shows how the writer feels and thinks
    about the topic.
  • The composition has personality.
  • The composition is convincing, not fake.
  • The composition is fun to read.
  • The paper is lively, or exciting in some way.

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Thought Shots
  • Thoughts of how you feel
  • Thoughts of what you are thinking
  • Thoughts about what you are dreaming
  • Thoughts about what you are imagining
  • Reflections
  • Tell.Dont Show

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Lune
A lune is a wonderful short form of poetry that
can be a great way to play with research and
other facts.
The first line is 3 words. The second line is 5
words.The third line is 3 words. You dont count
syllables. A strong lune does something
surprising in the last line.
President Bill Clinton Sitting in a tree
pondering Get the saw!
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Voice Rubric
  • Rating of 1 Weak

Rating of 3 Developing
Rating of 5 Strong
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Word Choice
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Definition of Word Choice
  • With good WORD CHOICE, the writer creates a
    mental picture for the reader by using words that
    are specific and accurate.
  • The writer uses strong action verbs whenever
    possible to show the reader what is happening
    rather than tell the reader.
  • The adjectives are descriptive as possible.
  • The nouns are specific, not general.
  • Slang and clichés are used sparingly, if at all.
  • Striking words and phrases catch the readers
    eye, but the language is natural and not
    overdone. Strong word choice is characterized not
    so much by an exceptional vocabulary that
    impresses the reader, but more by the skill to
    use everyday words well.

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Writers of Word Choice should do the following
  • Use words that create a mental picture for the
    reader
  • Use powerful action verbs
  • Use adjectives that are descriptive as possible
  • Use specific, not general nouns
  • Use language that is natural, not overdone
  • Avoid repetition

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Word Choice
  • The words paint a picture in the readers mind.
  • Add drama to your writing by using strong action
    verbs.
  • The writer uses specific nouns to identify
    people, places, and objects.
  • The writer uses descriptive adjectives to help
    create a mental picture for the reader.
  • The writer uses similes or metaphors to explain
    anything unusual to the reader.

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Verbs and Nouns
  • Strong writing is built on nouns and verbs, not
    adjectives and adverbs.
  • Dont write
  • I really, really hate school lunches because
    they are just too disgusting and gross.
  • Do write
  • I dont eat stale cornbread, ravioli stuffed
    with gray mystery meat, powdered mashed potatoes,
    doughy pizza, beet cubes, army beans that look
    like theyve been through one too many battles
    and yellowing vanilla pudding with gobs of cool
    whip, which coat the roof of your mouth like
    latex paint.

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Sketch People
  • He thought he was the handsomest guy in the
    Western Hemisphere. He was pretty handsome
    tooIll admit it. But he was mostly the kind of
    handsome guy that if your parents saw his picture
    in your Year Book, theyd right away say, Who is
    this boy? I mean he was mostly a Year Book kind
    of handsome guy.

Catcher in the Rye
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Sketch People
  • The man was an Indiandressed in furs and
    leather, with moccasins that came all the way up
    to his knees. His skin was dark. His hair was
    dark, and he wore a dark colored headband. His
    eyes sparkled in the sunlight, but the rest of
    his face was hard as stone.

Stone Fox
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Thumbnail Sketch
  • Aunt Sponge was enormously fat and very short.
    She had small piggy eyes, a sunken mouth, and one
    of those white flabby faces that looked exactly
    as though it had been boiled. She was like a
    great white soggy over boiled cabbage. Aunt
    Spiker, on the other hand, was lean and tall and
    bony, and she wore steel-rimmed spectacles that
    fixed onto the end of her nose with a clip.

James and the Giant Peach
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Sketch Places
  • I didnt see hardly anyone on the street. Now
    and then you just saw a man and a girl crossing
    the street, with their arms around each others
    waist and all, or a bunch of hoodlumy-looking
    guys and their dates, all of them laughing like
    hyenas at something you could bet wasnt funny.
    New Yorks terrible when somebody laughs on the
    street late at night. You can hear it for miles

Catcher in the Rye
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Simile Making
  • Similes grow out of trying to describe something
    thats just too hard to describe on its own.
  • The sun was pasted like a wafer in the sky.
  • He was as nervous as a hemophiliac in a razor
    factory.
  • Measuring the richness of learning with a
    standardized test is like judging chili by
    counting the beans.
  • When my baby sister cries its like the world is
    on fire and all I have to put it out is gasoline.

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Word Choice Rubric
Rating of 1 Beginning
Rating of 3 Developing
Rating of 5 Strong
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Sentence Fluency
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Definition of Sentence Fluency
  • Sentence Fluency is the Readability of the
    paper.
  • Sentences should have different beginnings,
    lengths, and structure.
  • The paper should be written in complete
    sentences, not fragments.
  • Fluent writing has cadence, power, rhythm, and
    movement.
  • It is free of awkward word patterns that slow the
    readers progress.
  • Each sentence is a complete thought that makes
    sense.

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Writers of Sentence Fluency should do the
following
  • Give the writing an easy flow and rhythm
  • Invite expressive oral reading to the text
  • Use writing that sounds natural
  • Dont be redundant in your sentence beginnings
  • Use compound sentences along with simple
    sentences

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Sentence Fluency
  • Sentence Fluency is the rhythm and flow of the
    language, the sound of word patterns, the way in
    which the writing plays to the ear, not just to
    the eye.
  • How does it sound when read? That is the test.
    Can the student read it fluently? If so, then it
    has an excellent chance for good fluency.

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Sentence Fluency Rubric
  • Rating of 1

Rating of 3
Rating of 5
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Conventions
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Definition of Conventions
  • Correct Spelling
  • Correct Punctuation
  • Correct capitalization
  • Correct grammar
  • Correct paragraphing

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Writers of Convention should do the following
  • Use grammar that contributes to clarity and style
  • Guide the reader through the paper with correct
    punctuation
  • Enhance the readability of the paper with
    conventions
  • Reinforce the organization with good paragraphing

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Conventions
  • Writing that is strong in conventions has been
    proofread and edited with care.
  • The paper isnt one or two huge paragraphs. Each
    new idea has its own paragraph, which is
    indented.
  • Ask yourself, How much work would a copy editor
    need to do to prepare the piece for publication?
    This will keep all of the elements in
    conventions equally in play.
  • Convention is the only trait where we make
    specific grade level accommodations.

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Rubric for Conventions
  • Rating of 1 Beginning

Rating of 3 Developing
Rating of 5 Strong
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Good Critics
  • Listen
  • Start Positively
  • Praise Specifically
  • Ask Curious ???
  • Ask Helpful ???
  • Make you want to write!

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Things I Dont have to do today
  • I dont need to read every draft a student
    writes.
  • I dont need to correct every grammatical error
    my students make.
  • I dont need to pick topics for my students to
    write about.
  • I DONT NEED TO BE THE EXPERT WHO FIXES MY
    STUDENTS WORK!!!

DONT DO IT!
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Things to do today
  • I will build a class of good critics, give them
    guidelines and Model, Model, Model!
  • I will give students the editing pen and
    proofreading symbols.
  • I will find tools to have THEM keep track of
    their work.
  • If I have 30 students, I will have 30 teachers
    aides. I will train students to assess and
    reflect on their own work daily and take charge
    of their learning!

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Writers Tool Box
  • Tool 1 Questions
  • Tool 2 Snapshots
  • Tool 3 Thoughtshots
  • Tool 4 Exploding the Moment
  • Tool 5 Making a Scene

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Questions
  • Rule NO YES NO QUESTIONS!
  • First step a student must read their essay to
    their partner.
  • Next step their partner will verbally ask one
    question (not a yes or no question) about the
    essay . The reason he/she asks this is that
    something isnt clear to him/her or they want to
    know more about something.
  • Next step the writer places a (?) in the place
    where he/she must revise.
  • The partner then takes essay and reads it. Then
    writes a (?) on the paper where they want to know
    more about something or if things are not clear.

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Snapshots
  • Tool is a picture of a box camera
  • Focus on close physical details
  • SHOW US DONT TELL US!
  • Freezing the action with words
  • After reading the essay, your partner will draw a
    box camera where he/she feels that they have a
    problem visualizing a part of the writing.
    Meaning the writer will revise to make the
    visualization clearer.

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Thoughtshots
  • Internal Reflection Id like to know what the
    character is thinking. Let me inside.
  • Move inside the characters and show what their
    characters are feeling
  • Tool is thought bubble..
  • Partner draws a thought bubble where they want to
    know what the character is thinking.

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Three basic things that authors do to portray the
internal reflections of their characters are
  • Characters have flashbacks, triggering their
    memories of related events or causes
  • Characters have what we call flashforwards,
    predicting the outcomes of their actions and
    anticipating what people will say and think.
  • Characters have what we call brain arguments,
    debating with themselves about what is going on
    and what they should do about it.

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Exploding the Moment
  • Tool is a stick of dynamite
  • Exploding the moment helps students to tell
    important parts in slow motion
  • Allows writers to stretch the exciting seconds of
    their stories into what seems like hours,
    creating suspense!

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Making the Scene
  • The tool is a directors action board.
  • The Making the Scene tool helps students
    evaluate their drafts for the four main
    ingredients of narrative writing
  • Action
  • Dialogue
  • Snapshots
  • Thoughtshots

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Partners and students distinguish these four main
ingredients with highlighting pens. This allows
them to see where and how often they are are used.
  • Blue is for action

Yellow is for dialogue
Red is for snapshots (here being used to include
physical descriptions)
Purple for thoughtshots or internal descriptions
With the evidence in front of them, students had
reasons to revise and saw possibilities of doing
so.
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A teacher with high expectations requires quality
work products and encourages presentations to
real audiences.
When you leave here I hope that you leave with
this concept.
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The End
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