Research and experience show that writers need three things: ownership of the form and subject of their writing; feedback from other writers; and time to draft and revise. Yet the harsh and confusing reality of today's college-entrance and state-mandated examinations-or any test with an essay component-is that students, trained in writing workshops, go on the clock to compose a paper on an assigned topic, in a prescribed form, for which they will receive no feedback. ...And their future depends on it. In Writing on Demand , you'll discover how to help your students gain the valuable skills they need to succeed on the essay portions of the SAT, ACT, Advanced Placement, and other exams and to help them develop as writers. Anne Ruggles Gere, Leila Christenbury, and Kelly Sassi take you through the entire testing process, offering insights on several key strategies for on-demand writing, including how to: quickly decode writing prompts to uncover the goals and expectations of the assignment organize thoughts swiftly and use the allotted time efficiently understand how tests are scored approach the scorers as an audience Most importantly, they show you how integrate these strategies into a program of best practices instead of mere test prep. In addition, a companion website offers more than 50 downloadable prompts, sample student essays, grading rubrics, and minilessons that give you a chance to aid your students in understanding this specialized genre and to use their composing skills in this artificially compressed version of the writing process. Give your students the opportunity to develop the proficiency and confidence they need to succeed in on-demand writing situations without abandoning the principles behind your writing workshop. Read Writing on Demand and find out how students can not only beat the clock, but write well-even in the most trying conditions for writers.
With today's emphasis on state assessment and writing across the curriculum, this book offers excellent advice to prepare students for writing assessments. It is written especially for teachers of high school students. Because high-stakes tests are here to stay for the foreseeable future, it is the teacher's responsibility to assure that students are taught to write on demand. The book offers approaches that simultaneously help develop student writing abilities and prepare students to write successfully on demand. The authors assume that good writing and writing on demand are not contradictory, that assessment is an integral part of effective writing instruction, that writing prompts can be approached rhetorically, that careful reading fosters good writing, and that criteria for evaluation belong in the classroom. Useful Topics for teaching writing: Thinking Backward - pp. 9-30 Students should read and discuss in general terms a range of models; assess in specific terms the qualities of those models; and speculate on the impetus for each model and what it is trying to accomplish. Qualities that are routinely assessed in rubrics are discussed on p. 27. The most important point students need to know is that the writer's adult audience is a definite constant. The authors make clear that adult assessors judge students' abilities on state writing tests. The ability to read a prompt and use it effectively is crucial. The authors also address the challenge of time, helping students quickly make notes on a prompt, pre-write, and know where they are going. Process of Writing: pp. 31 - 60. Most helpful strategies: Ways to Get into Your Writing. Brainstorming - take a minute or two to jot down everything they know about the subject. Listing - for more narrow topics and put in categories. Listing and Forced Choice - more directed and focuses on one aspect of an assignment. Webbing or clustering. Visualizing - doodle and draw. Free-writing - brief (three- to five- minute). Looping - write in short, timed segments, look for a phrase or word or whole sentence that seems the most important and continuing to write for three to five minutes. Five W's. Cubing. Using Writer's Notebook. Good mini-lesson on Peer Response Writing Groups on p. 55. Conference with students on p. 58. The Rhetoric of Prompts and Assignments - pp.62- 88. The Five Prompt Analysis Questions - p. 67. Also gives examples of expository, persuasive, and narrative prompts. There is a good example of using visual images as a narrative prompt on pp. 81-84.
Writing on Demand: Best Practices and Strategies for Success
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
The importance of timed writing tests such as the SAT, the AP exam, and state tests seriously challenge writing teachers' best practices, which have emphasized the writing process. As a high school teacher, I found this book extremely helpful in readying my students (and myself!) for this challenge. Although many of the teaching practices suggested in this book are not new, they are reconsidered in ways which will prepare students for timed exams by using an abbreviated process approach. The focus on rhetoric provides students with a systematic tool for analyzing their own writing and other writers' texts. The minilessons are particularly helpful, and I plan to incorporate them into both my AP class and my ninth grade class.
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