According to a recent informal poll at the Landry Academy Homeschool Mom's Retreat, teaching our students to write well is a dreaded task. My own interaction with home educators would agree with this poll and add that grading the writing is also a daunting task.
I am a firm believer that a student who regularly reads good literature will be a better writer. Being exposed to a variety of writing styles and voices will help a writer develop their own voice and style.
A student who writes regularly will also become a better writer. Students should, ideally, write something at least every week. This could be a journal entry, letter, essay, short story, book report, or lesson summary.
I have found the Rod and Staff English Grammar texts to be a very thorough and affordable curriculum to teach grammar and writing.
However, through the years, I have found a couple additional resources to be invaluable for teaching and evaluating writing.
The first one, The Elements of Style, Fourth Edition
The book, by Strunk and White, is short and easy to read. It is an excellent writing handbook. I have used this book in some writing classes that I have taught. I require the students to read the book and use it as a reference tool to improve their writing. My children like this book so much that they take it to college with them and I have to keep buying another copy to have at home!
A FREE resource I discovered when I taught a writing class last year is the Purdue University Online Writing Lab.The teacher and the student can use this site. I think you could use this as a writing curriculum by working through each topic in the 7th-12th section.
I especially like the Paramedic Method for evaluating writing. I find that students tend to use too many 'to be' verbs and sometimes throw in words just to lengthen a sentence. The Paramedic Method forces students to write more concisely. It is hard work, but produces better writing.
Another evaluation option that I like is a writing rubric. Many different free rubrics can be found online or you can develop your own rubric. This is a basic rubric that I found. About.com has an article on creating a rubric for any subject as well as example rubrics.
With these resources, you can teach and evaluate writing inexpensively or for free. Your student could also use these resources for a self-directed writing program.
Don't let writing intimidate your or your student.
As with any skill, practice is key!
This was shared at hiphomeschoolmoms.com
I think I could use these writing resources! Thanks so much from me and my middle school/high school students.
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