Jennifer Serravallo calls herself a “dedicated reading
and writing workshop teacher.” As any dedicated reading and writing workshop
teacher will tell you, teaching in this fashion is both tremendously rewarding
and damned hard work. In her new book, The
Writing Strategies Book, Serravallo has given the hard-working literacy
teacher just the kind of help she needs. The
Writing Strategies Book is a companion book to The Reading Strategies Book, which Serravallo released two years
ago and which I reviewed here.
Like the earlier book, The Writing
Strategies Book has Serravallo’s characteristically thoughtful
organization, grounding in research, and helpful format. Whatever your concern
about the needs of a particular writer or group of writers in grades K-8, you
are likely to find assistance here.
The book is organized around ten goals, arranged in a
loose hierarchy. Serravallo’s view (reflecting Hattie’s research) is that the
skillful writing teacher assists students to articulate a goal and then
provides strategies and feedback to help them achieve that goal. The ten goals
are composing with pictures, engagement, generating ideas, focus,
organization/structure, elaboration, word choice, conventions, and partnerships
and clubs. These goals are then arranged in such a way to allow teachers to pick
and choose appropriately for students at different levels of writing
development.
Each chapter introduces the goal and suggests how to
know if the teacher is choosing the right goal for a particular writing
student. The chapters also contain dozens of strategies to help the harried
teacher meet the individual needs of students at varying levels of control of
the writing process. These strategy sheets, similar to those in Serravallo’s
previous book, are little masterpieces of design to help the teacher use them
efficiently and effectively. Each strategy sheet tells you for whom the
strategy is designed (grade levels, genre, processes) and contains an
explanation of the strategy, teaching tips, prompts to use with the writer, and
a Hat Tip that provides the interested reader with a place to look for further
reading on the topic.
Speaking of the strategies approach to teaching writing, Serravallo says "Strategies help to take something that proficient writers do naturally and without conscious effort, and make it visible, clear, doable for the student writer. The strategies addressed are many and varied. Here is
a sampling.
- Reread Your Pictures So It Sounds like a Storybook
- Experiment with Change
- Reread to Jump Back In
- Observe Closely
- Subtopics Hiding in Topics
- Defining Moments
- Zoom in on a Moment of Importance
- Moving from Chunk to Chunk
- Write the Bones, then Go Back to Flesh It Out
- See the World like a Poet
- Be Your Own Harshest Critic
- Precise Nouns
- Vary Words to Eliminate Repetition
- Visualize the Word and Have-a-Go
- Write, Reread, Write, Reread, Repeat
- Creating Complex Sentences
- Voice Comma
- Talk Around the Idea, Then Write
- Stroytelling to Figure Out Point of View and Perspective
It is a daunting array of strategies, but fortunately Serravallo
provides an introductory chapter, Getting Started, that clearly explains how to
use the book and provides a great many suggestions for setting up a writing
workshop in the classroom. Whether you are new to writing workshop, or a
writing workshop veteran, you will want to start here to learn how to use the
book most effectively and for the suggestions for setting up the classroom.
The
Writer Strategies Book is true to its subtitle, Your Everything Guide to Developing Skilled
Writers. It belongs on your desk right next to your plan book to provide a helping hand as you work to help children become skillful and willing writers.
Serravallo, Jennifer. (2017). The Writing Strategies Book: Your Everything Guide to Developing Skilled Writers. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.
Serravallo, Jennifer. (2017). The Writing Strategies Book: Your Everything Guide to Developing Skilled Writers. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.
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