Strategies for Reluctant Writers
Reluctant writers, aren't born. They are often casualties of our classroom instruction. How? Possible reasons include the following:
- Remembering how to hold the writing the pencil correctly, form the letters correctly, space between words, generate thought and remember how to write a sentence with correct punctuation while making sense is too challenging for some kids.
- Due to handwriting issues, we've assigned a scribe for them, so they never have the opportunity to practice the art of writing on their own. Then the risks become too great.
- Poor spelling inhibits thought expressed on paper. Red pen corrections anyone?
- Characters - this tool offers the ability to generate a character, while changing hair, clothing, skin tone and facial features. Students can use this tool t
o then generate descriptive writing about something they created. Take a screen shot to save the created text and character.
- Wacky Web Tales - an online MadLibs. Kids add single words by category (clothing, adjective, word ending in -ing, etc) so best for grade 3 and above.
- Online Story Starters from Scholastic - Spin the levers to generate various writing prompts in various formats. I just spun this starter - "Describe a vacation with a silly kangaroo who goes to summer camp" (a second grade prompt) and can type in a notebook, letter, newspaper or postcard format. Includes a drawing tool. Great for grades K-6.
- Fractured Fairy Tales - Create your own fairy tale based upon three popular stories. from the Student Interactive Resources at readwritethink.org.
- Bio-Cube - create a three dimensional character cube describing six traits about a character they have read about or adapt it to be autobiographical.
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