Teaching Texts and Forms
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Teaching Texts and Forms
This course is part of Teaching Writing Specialization
Instructor: Mark Farrington
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What you'll learn
How to teach a variety of writing forms, including argument, personal writing and creative writing.
How to connect reading and writing in teaching your students.
Details to know
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There are 4 modules in this course
The first job of any writer is to get words down on paper, and teaching writing as process helps students gain the fluency, comfort and confidence they need to succeed at any writing task. But complex, comprehensive writing tasks often bring with them specific expectations and conventions the writer must address to be successful. This course will examine some of those more comprehensive writing tasks: personal essays; argument, analysis and other forms of transactional writing; and creative writing. Learners will also identify strategies for supporting the reading/writing connection and practical assignments for engaging students in writing around texts.
Imagine a scenario where a student is asked, for example, to name the capital city, state bird, state motto and primary economic industry of their state, and although they get the first three correct, on the fourth that student is told, “No, I’m sorry, that’s wrong.” Now imagine a scenario where a student is asked to describe a time in their life when they realized for the first time something important about themselves or the way the world worked. Whatever they say, the one response they won’t be hearing is, “I’m sorry, that’s wrong.” Personal writing allows students to do research into the area they know best: themselves and their lives. In this module, learners will define what constitutes personal writing as well as the benefits of encouraging students to engage in personal writing. They will identify and apply strategies for teaching personal writing, and create a personal writing prompt they can use in their classrooms.
What's included
7 videos3 readings1 assignment2 peer reviews1 discussion prompt
7 videos•Total 46 minutes
- Teaching Writing Specialization Welcome Video•6 minutes
- Teaching Texts and Forms Course Welcome Video•3 minutes
- Responding to Your Fellow Learners•3 minutes
- Personal Writing Welcome Video•1 minute
- Characteristics of Personal Writing•10 minutes
- Benefits of Personal Writing•12 minutes
- "Fish Cheeks": Mentor Text for the Personal Essay•10 minutes
3 readings•Total 60 minutes
- Personal Writing Prompts•20 minutes
- "Fish Cheeks," by Amy Tan•20 minutes
- "Superman and Me," by Sherman Alexie•20 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
- Characteristics of Personal Writing•30 minutes
2 peer reviews•Total 120 minutes
- Personal Writing and You•60 minutes
- Analysis of Mentor Text•60 minutes
1 discussion prompt•Total 40 minutes
- Personal Writing•40 minutes
Often, writing is taught as writing, and reading is taught as reading. But there can be great value in connecting the two. In this module, learners will identify strategies for supporting the reading/writing connection and practical assignments for engaging students in writing around texts. Learners will identify different techniques of reading, including reading like a writer and deep reading, and will reflect on how they might apply their learning with the students they currently teach or will teach in the future.
What's included
6 videos5 readings3 assignments1 peer review1 discussion prompt
6 videos•Total 35 minutes
- Reading Like a Writer Welcome Video•1 minute
- What is "Reading Like a Writer"?•4 minutes
- Introduction to "Story in Three Parts"•2 minutes
- "Tickits" and Teaching Genre Awareness•10 minutes
- Rhetorical Analysis of a Text•6 minutes
- Observing a Poem•12 minutes
5 readings•Total 85 minutes
- Story in Three Parts•30 minutes
- Story in One Part•15 minutes
- "Tickits"•15 minutes
- I Want a Wife•15 minutes
- My Papa's Waltz•10 minutes
3 assignments•Total 65 minutes
- Reading Like a Writer•30 minutes
- Genre Awareness•5 minutes
- Rhetorical Analysis•30 minutes
1 peer review•Total 60 minutes
- Teaching the Reading/Writing Connection•60 minutes
1 discussion prompt•Total 30 minutes
- Reflection on Reading Like a Writer•30 minutes
Too often these days, it seems that “argument” gets confused with “arguing,” with the goal being to prove , “I’m right and you’re wrong.” But true argument is a way of “entering the conversation” on a question or issue and considering multiple perspectives with the goal of arriving at the best option. In this module, learners will identify and define the different forms of argument and persuasion along with strategies for teaching argument writing. They will also identify and practice techniques of critical analysis, and consider other forms of transactional writing, including informational and instructional writing.
What's included
9 videos6 readings2 assignments1 peer review4 discussion prompts
9 videos•Total 49 minutes
- Transactional Writing Welcome Video•2 minutes
- What is Transactional Writing?•5 minutes
- Writing to Inform•5 minutes
- Writing to Instruct•4 minutes
- An Audience of (more than) One•6 minutes
- Types of Argument•5 minutes
- Open-Minded Inquiry•5 minutes
- What is Analysis?•7 minutes
- Analyzing an Ad•10 minutes
6 readings•Total 72 minutes
- Writing to Instruct: The PBJ Example•2 minutes
- Authenticity in Writing Prompts•15 minutes
- Three Appeals of Argument Podcast•10 minutes
- The Toulmin Method of Argument Podcast•15 minutes
- Prompt for Argument Writing•10 minutes
- Beyond the Five-Paragraph Essay•20 minutes
2 assignments•Total 60 minutes
- Transactional Writing•30 minutes
- Types and Methods of Argument•30 minutes
1 peer review•Total 45 minutes
- Transactional Writing•45 minutes
4 discussion prompts•Total 120 minutes
- Transactional Writing•30 minutes
- Authentic Audiences•30 minutes
- The Five-Paragraph Essay•30 minutes
- Analyze an Ad•30 minutes
“Tell me a story!” “Sing me a song!” Most children have a love for hearing – and telling – stories, and for the explosion of an emotion or a moment one often finds in poems and the lyrics of songs. In this module, learners will identify some of the components of fiction, poetry and creative nonfiction, and examine strategies for teaching students to write these forms. They’ll identify the benefits of encouraging students to explore creative writing, and will practice approaches that will help even the most reluctant creative writer find confidence and success.
What's included
10 videos7 readings1 peer review4 discussion prompts
10 videos•Total 46 minutes
- Creative Writing Welcome Video•3 minutes
- What is the Creative Process?•7 minutes
- The Visual Metaphor: A Creative Exercise•4 minutes
- Why Creative Writing?•3 minutes
- Assessing Creative Writing•4 minutes
- An Introduction to Fiction•6 minutes
- An Introduction to Fiction, Part 2•3 minutes
- Point of View in Fiction•9 minutes
- What is Poetry?•5 minutes
- The Speaker, or "Presence," in a Poem•2 minutes
7 readings•Total 150 minutes
- A Plea for Creative Writing in the Schools•10 minutes
- Assessing Creative Writing is Hard•10 minutes
- Birds on a Wire•10 minutes
- Story from a First Line Exercise•15 minutes
- A Sample Story•15 minutes
- Character Sketching•60 minutes
- Poem Sketching•30 minutes
1 peer review•Total 40 minutes
- Creative Writing Reflection•40 minutes
4 discussion prompts•Total 120 minutes
- Creative Writing and You•30 minutes
- Birds on a Wire•30 minutes
- Response to Character Sketching•30 minutes
- Poem Sketching•30 minutes
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We have designed the Teaching Writing Process course to provide a foundation for all the other courses, so we recommend taking that course first, although it is not required that you do so, and you may take these courses in any order you wish. You must complete all four courses before taking the Final Project.
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