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Designing Writing Assignments from A to Z

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Fulbright Senior Lecturer, University of Costa Rica ... Punto Uva. not very busy. many activities. swimming. snorkelling. on the Caribbean. some tourists, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Designing Writing Assignments from A to Z


1
Designing Writing Assignments from A to Z
  • Dr. Rory Donnelly
  • Fulbright Senior Lecturer, University of Costa
    Rica
  • Professor, Northeastern Illinois University,
    Chicago

2
Outline
  • What makes a writing assignment hard or easy?
  • Scaffolding
  • A look at two writing assignments
  • Writing a complete writing assignment

3
What makes a writing assignment hard?
  • The purpose isnt clear
  • Theres no clear audience
  • Students dont know the vocabulary or the
    structures they need for the writing assignment
  • The genre is new
  • Students dont know how to start (or what to do
    next)
  • Students dont know grading criteria

4
What makes a writing assignment hard?
  • The assignment is long
  • Theres no feedback during the process
  • Everything is language-based
  • Students work alone at home
  • Students dont know how to go about writing the
    assignment

5
Scaffolding
6
How do you structure an assignment to provide
scaffolding?
  • Provide a purpose
  • Provide an audience
  • Activate vocabulary and structures
  • Use familiar genres
  • Provide models
  • Write out the steps in the process
  • Give grading criteria ahead of time

7
How else do you provide scaffolding?
  • Keep it short
  • Provide formative feedback
  • Integrate the arts and visual aids
  • Move writing into the classroom
  • Work in groups
  • Build the writing process into the assignment

8
An assignment for beginners (no scaffolding)
  • Write 5 sentences about your bedroom. Use the
    prepositions you studied in class.

9
An assignment for beginners (with scaffolding)
  1. Draw a picture of your bedroom.
  2. Look at the vocabulary page
  3. Look at the prepositions chart.
  4. Write 5 sentences about your bedroom.

10
Grading Criteria
  • Sentences describe the picture
  • Prepositions are used accurately
  • Sentences start with capital and end with period
  • Each sentence contains a subject and a verb.

11
An assignment for low-intermediates (no
scaffolding)
  • Write a paragraph on the topic My Favorite
    Beach. Include a title and a topic sentence

12
An assignment for intermediates (with scaffolding)
  • Your friend is going to visit your country for
    the first time. He (she) wants to go to a beach.
    Write a letter to your friend describing your
    favorite beach. Include details.

13
An assignment for intermediates (with scaffolding)
  • Process
  • Make a list of beaches and pick one.
  • Make a brainstorming map to plan what you will
    say
  • Study the model letter for ideas and for form
  • Write the letter.
  • Read it to a classmate
  • Your classmate will ask you questions. Respond
    to the questions.
  • You may want to add more information. Add it in
    your second draft.

14
Example of Brainstorming Map
usually hot and humid
not very busy
Punto Uva
around 5 hours from San Jose
some tourists, but not many
swimming
many activities
snorkelling
15
Grading Criteria
  • Your letter is about a favorite beach
  • It follows the letter format in the model
  • You describe details about the beach
  • Your brainstorming map is attached to your letter
  • Sentences have subjects, verbs, capitals, and
    periods
  • Your letter is proofread for use of is/are and
    have/has

16
Parts of a writing assignment
  • purpose
  • audience
  • genre
  • vocabulary and structures
  • process steps
  • grading criteria

17
Summary
  • Include purpose, audience, genre, and process in
    each writing assignment.
  • Give grading criteria with the assignment

18
Summary
  • Activate vocabulary and target structures.
  • Provide additional scaffolding by
  • keeping assignments short
  • giving formative feedback
  • using the arts
  • using group work, and
  • building in the writing process
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