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Scaffold 1 & 2: Student Generated Exemplars and Writing the “Recipe” for Literary Analysis
First, Mrs. Westbrook created a task that required students to identify and interpret the underlying meaning of a piece of literature and then to make arguments about it. She began by showing a student written exemplar (Figure 1) to demystify the task and give students a concrete model for their own writing. Then students generated a list of the characteristics of literary analysis demonstrated in the example. This strategy allowed the teachers to delineate the requirements for the task and tied those requirements to specific writing moves used in good analysis (Figure 2). It also provided clarity for targeted feedback. For example, Mrs. Montecuollo and Mrs. Westbrook could read student responses and be clear about what each writer needed to add or change in order to meet standard.
Figure 1. Annotated Student Exemplar
Figure 2. Teaching Chart: Rules for Literary Analysis
Scaffold 3: Cloze Writing Technique
Another key to the success of this lesson was the third scaffold The Cloze Writing Technique (Figure 3). This scaffold provided students with sentence starters gleaned from the student exemplar and allowed them to focus on the content of their arguments without worrying about how to begin. As students struggled to articulate their ideas, they worried that their writing sounded “so simple” and “so elementary.” By helping students articulate their ideas more complexly, Mrs. Montecuollo and Mrs. Westbrook honored each student’s thinking. Thus, students were more willing to take a risk and push themselves from summary to analysis.
Figure 3. Cloze Writing Technique
Scaffold 4: Class Blogs as Formative Assessment
Finally, students posted their pieces to Mrs. Westbrook’s class blog (Figure 4). After posting the students received differentiated feedback to help revise their responses. In addition, the blog is public, so students had a real audience and real responses to reference as they worked to fill gaps in their writing/understanding/learning. In this way, these instructors maximized the learning for all of their students and ensured the class met standard.
Figure 4. English 9 Class Blog
English 9 students blogging using a combination of their own devices, Chromebooks, and MacBooks.
A further way to look at a literary analysis is to think about a piece of literature from your own point of view. More willingly than thinking about the author’s objectives, you can increase an argument based on any particular term.
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I have NEVER thought about my students doing a cloze piece from an exemplar. PERFECT!! :)
ReplyDeleteShannon
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