Yes,
indeedy. That’s Wednesday Writing
WorkoutS, plural.
And
that’s because Sheboygan, Wisconsin author,
educational consultant and veteran elementary and middle school classroom
teacher Michael Leannah has made our month of May even merrier by generously
contributing 4 Wednesday Writing Workouts from his recently-released book WE THINK WITH INK (Brightside Publications, 2016).
Michael
writes fiction and nonfiction for children and adults. Tilbury House releases his picture book MOST PEOPLE in August. Two other picture
books are soon to follow: GOODNIGHT WHISPERS (Familius) and FARMER
HUCKINSHUCK’S WILD RIDE (Splashing Cow Books.)
His stories have appeared in U.S. and Australian magazines.
He authored the award-winning SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE: MEMORIES OF LAUERMAN BROTHERS DEPARTMENT STORE and is the editor and contributing author of WELL! REFLECTIONS ON THE LIFE AND CAREER OF JACK BENNY.
WE THINK WITH INK is a trove of lessons, projects and activities
designed to increase reading and writing skills in the classroom…and
beyond. It’s an ideas book for
elementary and middle school teachers seeking to merge writing instruction into
science, social studies and math classes.
It’s a guide for teachers looking to help students increase
self-confidence and self-esteem. It’s
also a book for students working independently on creative writing skills as well as a manual for learners young
and old – i.e. me and you, our TeachingAuthors readers - who aspire to be good
– even published – writers.
“The WE THINK WITH INK approach relies heavily on the sharing and
critiquing of stories,” Michael shared.
“Our goal is publication, which means that people other than those in
the classroom or group will read what we write.
Booklets are put together and made available on the shelves of the
school library. Story collections are
sent home for families to read. Our
writing is distributed to local coffee shops and doctors’ waiting rooms. Our booklets/anthologies are given as gifts
to friends and family. And yes, we write
with the goal of someday sending our very best work to magazine and book
publishers.”
Check out today’s WWW and try your hand, then be sure to return
the next three Wednesdays in May to do the same.
Thank
you, Michael, for sharing your smarts, your passion for writing and WE THINK
WITH INK writing workouts with our TeachingAuthors readers! Oh, and for making yourself available at contactmichael@gmail.com, should our readers wish
to share their appreciation.
Enjoy
thinking with ink!
Esther
Hershenhorn
P.S.
Please accept my SINCERE apologies for my laptop's
misbehavior - as evidenced by the unevenly-back-grounded
text below! My Lenova Yoga and Blogger are not playing well
together. We're workin' on it!
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
In the process of writing our
stories and poems, we learn from each other. We share our stories, compare
notes, ask for honest opinions, help each other to improve our skills.
Any writers who work together, be it in
the classroom, in a critique group, or just two friends who regularly get
together to compare stories and give feedback, must develop a sense of trust. They must
come to know each other quite well. To jumpstart the entire process,
it is good to begin with a “Get to Know You” activity or two. In the school
room, the following activities may be used during the first week or two in
September. Because we are complex individuals and our feelings change over
time, it is good to work in a “Get to Know You” activity once every couple of
months throughout the year.
Teachers may give this as a piece of homework on Day One and ask for it to be returned in one week. This gives participants plenty of time to analyze and describe their interests, likes, and dislikes.
Encourage students to explain their
answers fully, using well-written sentences. Because the papers will later be
shared (read aloud or passed around to be read silently), participants should
provide information that is interesting and — to an extent that is comfortable
— revealing.
Students are required to answer at
least seven of the ten questions. When it is time to share, students will read
their answers aloud, or have a friend or the teacher do it.
1. In what cities have you
lived?
2. What do you like about
your favorite food?
3. What character in a book
or movie do you admire?
4. What character in a book
or movie scares you?
5. What character in a book
or movie would you like to be for one hour?*
6. What animal would you
like to be for one hour?*
7. What is your most prized
possession?
8. What’s the scariest or
most dangerous thing you’ve ever done?
9. What would you say or do
if you met your favorite famous person?
10. What do you think you’ll
be doing when you’re 30 years old?
* When asking a “What
would you like to be” question, I recommend putting a time limit on it. Would I
like to be a lion or a mosquito or the president of Germany, Brazil, or
Zimbabwe? For an hour, maybe, but no longer than that.
Interviews
This “Get
to Know You” activity works well as an ice-breaker for students meeting for the
first time, as well as a way for familiar students to get to know each other
even better. I suggest using this activity several times throughout the year.
Allow time for each student to write five or six
questions, which, if approached correctly, is an exercise in creative thinking
by itself. The famous journalist Jim Nicholson once said, “There aren’t any
boring people; there are just boring questions,” so encourage unusual
questions: “Which of your relatives do you like the most?” “What is a smell you
really love?” “What happened the last time you laughed your head off?”
Place the students in groups of two or three.
Students will ask each other the questions and record the answers. The
interviewers will then report to the class and share the information learned
during the interviews.
Notes to the Teacher
Perhaps my favorite method of “Getting to Know You” involves the writing of notes back and forth between student and teacher. I found an old-fashioned rural mail box at rummage sale and used it in my classroom for this purpose. (If a real mailbox is not available, a decorated shoe box will suffice.) When students placed a note or letter inside the box, they raised the little flag on the side so I knew a delivery had been made. I respond promptly with a note passed during lunch or some such time.
In the rush of the day, students
sometimes don’t have the opportunity to share news concerning personal troubles,
worries, and concerns (divorce, sickness in the family, older siblings moving
away, etc.). The mailbox allows students to communicate with the teacher in a
way that is secret, safe, and satisfying.
I have found this simple practice of offering the
chance to write “Notes to the Teacher” to be very important and meaningful.
There is something very nice about a kid revealing a wounded piece of ego and
hearing from his teacher in a note: “When I was your age, that happened to me
too.”
As the year goes on, “Get to Know
You” activities become increasingly unnecessary, because, due to all the
writing and sharing and critiquing going on in the classroom every day, members
of the class naturally get to know one another better and better every day.
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