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Examples of rough drafts2/8/2024 ![]() I know you want your students to have a firm command of spelling, grammar, syntax, and structure, but this doesn’t all necessarily come at once, and if they continue to be bogged down by errors and corrections, some students may conclude that they’re not good enough, they can’t write, they keep getting it “wrong.” So encourage them not to focus too much on spelling or grammar in the first draft. Pre-writing exercises can help students organize their ideas, prepare to put them on paper, and alleviate some of the frustration of beginning from scratch. At the end of class, when we debriefed, one student said, “ I’ve never written a poem before and I wouldn’t know what to do if you just told me to write a poem, but by making the list, I organized my thoughts and wrote a poem.” Exactly what I was going for, encouraging students to get out of their comfort zones, experiment, and take away some of the intimidation of writing. Then they took a line from their poem and crafted it into a story. We looked at Maggie Nelson’s Bluets (one of my favorite books) and I had them pick their own color and write a list of words it made them think of. I taught a genre-blending workshop and encouraged students studying various genres to play with their form, write a poem if you’re a story writer, write a story if you’re a poet. I got the chance to teach at the Governor’s Institute’s summer Young Writers program at Bennington College last summer. One thing that could be helpful is suggesting they jot down a list or an outline of their ideas before they start writing to get the creative juices flowing. Now, I recognize that school settings don’t necessarily accommodate these kinds of needs, but many students struggle to just sit down and write (so do many professional writers). He was excited about the ideas he’d come up with and the fear and shame of not being inspired right away seemed to fade. He worked on it throughout the weekend, asking me to read the next draft and the next. I told him it was fine if he didn’t get a draft down in the allotted time, and would he like to just share what he’d come up with? What came out was an amazing story that he had yet to write down but had formulated completely in his mind. By the end of writing time, he hadn’t written a word and seemed embarrassed. ![]() “I need to go for a walk first.” I told him that this was fine, and as long as he stayed in the building, go for it. One student appeared nervous, looking around at the other students writing away, and sheepishly came up to me. On the first day, my co-teacher and I gave an ice-breaking assignment and the students got to work right away. This is important to emphasize to students, that everybody starts somewhere and puts a lot of work into the final product, that it won’t be perfect (or even close!) the first time around, or maybe the second or third.Ī few years ago, I taught fiction at a Governor’s Institute Winter Weekend (for high school students) at Goddard College. Writers rework their ideas, revise, and complete many drafts before publishing a piece. Then go back and revise and improve.” Author/illustrator Jason Chin shows off his early drafts of his books in Williamstown, VT Explain that writing is a process, and that it’s appropriate, and even preferable, to just write something down, see where it goes, and to explore. It needs to be clear that writing needn’t be perfect the first time. Reading specialist (and former CLiF Board of Advisors member) Bruce Johnson says, “Some children often want to write down their work and get it perfect the first time. ![]() At CLiF programs, our presenters talk about their process for creating books and stories, and they often emphasize how many drafts they go through before reaching a final product. Remind students their first draft is not a final draft or a polished piece of work, and no one expects it to be. As David Wagoner wrote in his poem, “The Source,” “Only begin, and the rest will follow.” Don’t worry about it being “good,” yet, I always say. Often, the blank page can be daunting and, if you give yourself permission to write rough work first, everything else will follow. I tell my students to just get it all out on the page in early drafts and worry about tying it all together and finessing the work later. How can we help support these students in beginning the drafting process, sometimes the most frustrating or intimidating step? Some kids are intimated by writing in class, the daunting prospect of having to just sit down and write. There’s no “right” way to go about writing. Some prefer to just jump in and start writing and see what happens. ![]() Many people find “pre-writing” helpful, notes or an outline to help guide their writing. ![]() The process of writing begins before you actually put pen to paper (or words on a screen). ![]()
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