Writing assignments


What comes to your mind when you hear “writing”?  Are you imagining being back in school where your teacher writes a prompt on the board and you answer in a daily journal?  Maybe a series of worksheets your teacher created to help you learn punctuation, nouns, synonyms, and capitalization? Or perhaps it's a set of grade specific questions that have already been pre-planned out for the entire school year. 
Writing is supposed to be FUN…yes, that’s right, fun.  Yes, there has to be some instruction and ground laying procedures to help guide learners though this process, but writing is a way to let your thoughts or opinions come to life.  You can invent any character you want on paper, and the plot of your story is only limited to your imagination.  Writing can let the word know where you stand on certain issues.  Writing can be as simple as a Thank-You card, letting someone know you appreciated a gift, or to express your daily events on the social media (Twitter, Facebook, Wibbly)
There is no prescribed curriculum when it comes to teaching writing.  Everybody learns differently and at a different rate.
In our writing class there isn’t a designated series of yearly prompts to follow.  Learners have a choice in choosing the area that is interesting to them.  Although, at times, I might see a fun assignment (shhh…yes fun) and the class all agrees that everybody should write on the topic-especially when there is some type of art involved J
What it looks like:
You probably won’t find learners completing a piece of writing in a single sitting.  You will find students taking some of their writing all the way through the writing process over days or even weeks, depending on the topic or the rigidity of the issue.
You won’t find children limited to writing only the words they can spell.  Jotting down their thoughts and having a flow is what I’m asking of them.  Can you imagine if I stopped each student after a misspelled word and immediately had him or her look it up in the dictionary for accuracy? My kids would be more concerned about spelling the words correctly for me, and their original ideas would be stifled.  The moment would be gone.  I want the ideas and thoughts out on paper…we can go back and correct the spelling.  (Believe me, I am a BIG fan of spellcheck! Just ask the 6th grade teachers I used to work with.) Remember this is a writing assignment, not a spelling exam.
In my class I pick what to teach based on my students current needs. My lessons are not all mapped out before the year begins…although that would be nice; it’s just not feasible
The Writing Process:
We focus on the process, and then there is a bigger impact on the journey.  The end result is important, but the true learning takes place during the process.  In my opinion, valuable instruction in essay writing takes place over days or even weeks.  
Pre-writing: Writers decide on a topic and brainstorm ideas. I give them a choice if they want to work in groups for brainstorming or by themselves. However each student is responsible for turning in an essay.
Drafting: Writers write sentences and paragraphs, reread what they’ve written, and get suggestions from others.
Revising: Writers rearrange words or sentences, add or delete, replace words, and make sure their writing is fluent.
Editing: Writers correct grammar, spelling, and punctuation.  (This is where we adjust the spelling…not during the pre-writing process).
Publishing/Sharing: Writers create a final copy of their work and share it.