Howdy, Campers!
Teaching Authors are in the middle of our annual Two Weeks of Thanks-Giving. It began in 2011 with Esther’s post which launched her new form, the Thanku (with the same syllable count as a haiku--5-7-5, it thanks someone). As JoAnn so nicely wrote, it "charted the path to Thanksgiving through poetry".
This year we’re each posting about someone who makes a difference in ensuring others receive a quality education. We invite you to join us by posting your own poems, which can take the form of a Thanku. We’ll include a round-up of links to participating blog posts on November 29.
Authors who hold a
light and slow their pace so we
may walk beside you.
Today's exercise is from author and energizer bunny Alexis O'Neill (whose newest book, The Kite That Bridged Two Nations was just launched to wide acclaim) and who sat down with me here for an interview recently. Take it away, Alexis!
© AlexisO’Neill. All rights reserved
- Paper
- Pen or pencil
- A projected photo or painting of a wild mammal, reptile or bird, or children from another era or culture in a setting (not just a portrait)
- Timer
- Ask the students for a list of words that can follow the phrase, “I wonder . . .” (i.e. who, what when where why, how, if) Have them write these words on paper as a guide.
- Ask students to put their pens down and look at an image for exactly one one minute. Tell them that the only thing they have to do during that one minute is look at the image and “wonder” about it. Use a timer to keep this accurate.
- Make the image go dark. Tell the students to pick up their pens. Give them one minute to write at least one, but as many as possible, “wonder” questions that came to them when they looked at the image. Tell them that what they write is just for themselves and will not be collected.
- Bring the image back to the screen and begin timing.
- At the end of one minute, have them put pens down and share their wonder questions. When they share, they must begin with the phrase, “I wonder . . .”
- As each student expresses their “wonder” question out loud, just repeat it, but do not comment on it.
- After collecting “wonder” questions, begin having them find answers in the image itself. For example, you might say, “Jamie said, ‘I wonder where this is?’” Then you might invite Jamie to take a guess, but say, “Be sure to tell me what you see that makes you say that.” Each time a student guesses an answer to his or her “wonder” question, say, “What do you see that makes you say that?”
- It might be helpful to make a Who, What, When, Where, Why, How, If chart and put their guesses and the evidence they see under appropriate columns.
- Give students a chance to express any feelings the image might generate.
Thank you, Alexis! Readers, I wonder...what you and/or your students will write? And I wonder...will some of you send us your Thankus?
5 comments:
LOVE this exercise and definitely plan to use it in my next Young Authors camp. Thanks so much to both you, April, and Alexis!
Thx for sharing, Alexis. This is an interesting variation of an exercise I do in my classes at UCLA Extension (in which I give students a copy of a portrait, and ask them to answer questions like "What was he thinking when the photographer took this picture?" etc).
And I'm giving thanks to April, who gave me generous advice when I was starting at UCLA.
Oh, Michelle...thanku!!
I was busy with NaNoWriMo last month and didn't do any blog visiting. Thank you for this wonderful exercise and for the pictures. They set me wondering.
Oh Did you ever read Daughter of Time by Josephine Tey?
In it, a detective, laid up in bed is given some pictures to look at, He's always prided himself on his ability to read character in a face. When his friend informs him that the picture he thought was a wise and kind judge was actually Richard the Third, Detective Grant starts searching through history for the real story on Richard. I loved this book.
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