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10 Myths of Writer’s Workshop: Part 3 of 4

Myth #7: Where’s the beef?

I’ve written about this before as well. Focusing on structure before starting to write can lead to bland, generic paragraphs and reduce writing to formula instead of communication. Instead, I recommend just writing and then molding that writing into a structure through revising. By frontloading too much information in the beginning, some students will be overwhelmed and shut down. Let them get their ideas out first.

Myth #8: Revising and Proofreading are the same thing…and students can’t do either.

Many teachers are students are still confused about this. Revising is about ideas and not about mistakes. If there’s an error that impedes meaning then by all means take care of it in the revising but proofreading is the stage that is about conventions and making the writing correct. Students can do both independently with your guidance as long as you are modeling how to do it and not just lecturing about it (see Myth #1).

Myth #9: Students can’t follow prompts.

Students don’t need prompts but sometimes they will have to write to them. They can learn to follow directions if you teach them how to read them and figure out what’s being asked. However, following a prompt is almost a separate skill from writing. The good news is that if you teach students how to write well then learning to write to a prompt is easy. If you do too much at one time then it’s harder for students to learn anything.

Myth #10 We write because the teacher tells us to.

We sometimes do a good job of teaching students that we read for pleasure but we rarely teach students that writing is about authentic communication and that it is sometimes done because someone wants to do it. This is why some students (some of whom eventually become teachers) hate writing. Students need real reasons to write. Let them write a presentation, a letter, a blog and write something that they care to write about.

2 thoughts on “10 Myths of Writer’s Workshop: Part 3 of 4”

  1. Myth #9 –

    This is like a teaching to the test argument. It’s quite simple, if they are good writers to begin with, they will be successful on these types of prompts. However, if they only ever write to prompts, they’ll most likely not really develop as a writer, but the majority will probably find some success on the test.

  2. Mathew,
    I’ve found since I have a classroom blog even my most reluctant or struggling student writers look forward to writing. I’ve had literally no complaints from students. They love writing posts for the blog and reading each others work. Interestingly, they don’t seem to suffer from writers block as much either. To be honest, I love creating assignments for them knowing that they are going to enjoy doing them. I really do look forward to reading their work.

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