Showing posts with label narrative. Show all posts
Showing posts with label narrative. Show all posts

Monday, April 14, 2014

Writing as Homework!?

Tired of searching and searching for the perfect prompt to use in literacy stations, small groups, writing time, and an every day practice? I felt the same way, as I have my students complete a prompt once a week for homework. This is how is works:


  • Assigned on Monday Night---due Wednesday Morning
  • Yellow 3-tab folder
  • 2 dividers inside
    • Resource Tab
      • Rubric
      • Word Wall Chart
      • References for writing (transitions, adjectives, phrasing)
      • Guidelines (Title paper, date, # of paragraphs, etc)
    • Projects Tab
      • Blank lined writing paper
  • As the year went on my expectations grew higher (multiple paragraphs, on topic, word choices)
  • I use a rubric and put a letter grade, but the grade never goes into the grading book, as I know parents are supporting at home. 
    • I never discourage parent support with these unless I can tell the parent wrote the entire assignment. I know parents are giving great support at home with writing organization and paragraph use. I encourage it so they are able to do the independent work with me in class. 
 
Being new to third grade this past year, I had my checklist set at the beginning of the year. By October, I needed to raise the bar and set higher standards, so don't mind the correction on there! hehe!

I tried this first with my 2nd graders during the second semester. They did really well, but I tried with a notebook, and they didn't hold up very well by the end of the year. When I looped up with my class, I continued to the Monday Night Writing Prompt homework, but I used a yellow folder instead. I am so glad I did the folders because papers do not fall out and they can stand the wear-tear of going to and from school. 

I go back and use the rubric I provided them with to grade their work. I never actually put it in the gradebook as I know many students are getting too much help and others aren't getting enough help at home. I always write comments, so they know I am reading their work and taking it seriously. 

I get easily frustrating trying to find prompts to use. I worry I am giving them too many narratives and that I am not keeping track of the types of prompts I have given them. I finally created prompt task card file where it helps me coordinate which types of writing I have given them. This has helped a lot and my students always love guessing which type of writing I am giving them for homework! There are 150 prompt tasks cards total (50 Narratives, 50 Opinions, 50 Informative/Explanatory Texts, & a few blank cards to create your own). 

Visit my Teachers Pay Teachers Store or the product here!

I really believe in this method and will continue giving writing homework this week. I only give homework I believe students can benefit from. My parents commented by the end of the year and even the following year as I looped up with many of the students on how much better their writing has gotten. I saw a lot more confidence in my class when they were given independent writing activities as well. Now, I know what you're thinking...I did give other homework as well. My students didn't luck out as their only piece throughout the week. My breakdown was as follows:

Monday: Writing prompt & differentiated math fact practice (based on their skill level: add, sub, or multiplication)
Tuesday: Reading passage (to prepare for standardized tests) & math skill sheet (based on current skill) & reminder to bring Writing folder back tomorrow!
Wednesday: Re-read weekly story and answer a response to literature question; Study for spelling test
Thursday: Problem Solving worksheet & study for vocabulary, daily math review tests
Friday: Bring back signed Citizenship Folder (log) for Monday morning

I don't have parents complain as I try to differentiate where it is needed throughout the week, so parents know their child is getting what they need!