Lessons That Change Writers this question feed

asked by maxmill on November 23, 2006 1:56 AM

In Lessons That Change Writers, Nancie has narrowed and deepened her conversation with teachers, to focus on the minilesson as a vehicle for helping students improve their writing. She shares over a hundred of these writing lessons which are described by her students as “the best of the best.” The lessons fall into the following four categories that provide the structure for this book:

Lessons about Topics: ways to develop ideas for pieces of writing that will matter to writers and to their readers Lessons about Principles of Writing: ways to think and write deliberately to create literature Lessons about Genre: in which we observe and name the ways that good free verse poems, formatted poetry, essays, short stories, memoirs, thank-you letters, profiles, parodies, and book reviews work and Lessons about Conventions: what readers' eyes and minds have been trained to expect, and how marks and forms function to give writing more voice and power and to make reading predictable and easy.Learn more about Lessons That Change Writers by visiting




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I am a 6th grade LA teacher and have been using this book as a resource to aid in teaching writing workshop. This book was recommended to me by other LA teachers when I took the Puget Sound Writers Workshop over the summer. As with any resource, it needs to be adapted to fit your student's needs.
reviewed by freedrink on November 24, 2006 8:43 PM

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I just attended the workshop of the same name. I highly recommend, not only this workbook, but seeing Nancie in person. This binder includes reproducibles and essential workshop mini-lessons.
reviewed by blueoasis on November 28, 2006 8:52 PM

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