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Tom McHale

Over 150 Picture Prompts for Creative, Personal, Argumentative and Explanatory Writing ... - 0 views

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    "These writing prompts invite students to create short stories and poems, share experiences from their lives, tell us what they think an image is saying, weigh in on hot-button issues, and discover, question and explain scientific phenomena. Here, we've rounded up all the Picture Prompts we published for the 2017-18 school year and organized them by the type of writing they ask students to do. All are still open for comment."
Tom McHale

creative writing prompts . com ideas for writers - 0 views

shared by Tom McHale on 19 Oct 09 - Cached
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    Use the creative writing prompts and creative writing ideas to create stories, poems and other creative pieces from your imagination. The writing prompts can even help you come up with creative content for blogs and blog stories
Tom McHale

50 Writing Prompts for All Grade Levels | Edutopia - 0 views

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    "The collection of prompts below asks young writers to think through real or imagined events, their emotions, and a few wacky scenarios. Try out the ones you think will resonate most with your students. "
Tom McHale

200 Prompts for Argumentative Writing - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "What issues do you care most about? What topics do you find yourself discussing most passionately, whether online, at the dinner table, in the classroom or with your friends? Later this week we will be announcing a brand-new contest in which teenagers will be invited to write evidence-based persuasive pieces on the topics of their choice. To help jump-start your brainstorming, we have gathered a list of 200 writing prompts from our daily Student Opinion feature that invite you to take a stand."
Tom McHale

301 Prompts for Argumentative Writing - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "Scroll through the 301 prompts below that touch on every aspect of contemporary life - from politics to sports, culture, education and technology - and see which ones most inspire you to take a stand. Each question comes from our daily Student Opinion feature, and each provides links to free Times resources for finding more information."
Tom McHale

Introducing Our Weekly Common Core Aligned Reading and Writing Tasks - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "Last year, Mr. Olsen and Ms. Gross, who work at High Technology High School in Lincroft, N.J., a school that U.S. News ranks as the No. 1 S.T.E.M. school in the nation, created short daily reading and writing prompts for their students to use with that day's Times. They told us they wanted to do it again this year, but wanted to tailor the tasks more closely to Common Core demands. So we agreed. Each week, they will send us the questions they tried in class that they and their students felt were the most successful. So, beginning Sept. 21, each Friday you'll find three quick, classroom-tested tasks that ask students to do Common Core-focused work with that week's Times. Our hope is that you'll see at least one each Friday that works for you, and that you'll write in and help us shape the feature as we go. It's an experiment, after all."
Tom McHale

Kurt Vonnegut term paper assignment from the Iowa Writers' Workshop. - Slate Magazine - 2 views

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    Vonnegut's instructions: As for your term papers, I should like them to be both cynical and religious. I want you to adore the Universe, to be easily delighted, but to be prompt as well with impatience with those artists who offend your own deep notions of what the Universe is or should be. "This above all ..." I invite you to read the fifteen tales in Masters of the Modern Short Story. Read them for pleasure and satisfaction, beginning each as though, only seven minutes before, you had swallowed two ounces of very good booze. "Except ye be as little children ..."
Tom McHale

Common Core Practice | - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "Each Friday we collaborate with a classroom in New Jersey to test and publish three short writing ideas that address Common Core Standards and that are grounded in New York Times content. This week, all three prompts focus on the common theme of life on a coastline - a topic of great importance to our classroom collaborators, who recently went through weeks of disruption because of Hurricane Sandy."
Tom McHale

Newsela teaches kids how to spot fake news - Business Insider - 0 views

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    "To help kids separate fact from fiction, Newsela partnered with the American Press Institute in October of 2016. Now whenever kids read an article on their electronic device, in addition to their normal comprehension questions, they're prompted to ask questions about the article itself: Where do the facts come from? Is there a bias? What's missing from this piece? "That'll be like a mini-research project for the student," Coogan says. Teachers can ask kids probing questions about the outlet, including where it's headquartered, where it receives funding, and what affiliations its members might have. No one would go to such great lengths reading the morning paper, Coogan says, but it's meant to be overkill in order to instill healthy levels of skepticism. "It's a good exercise to always question the source of the information," she says."
Tom McHale

4 Strategies for Teaching Students How to Revise | Edutopia - 0 views

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    "At the beginning of the writing process, I have had students write silently. For it to be successful, in my experience, students need plenty of topics handy (self-generated, or a list of topics, questions, and prompts provided). Silent writing is a wonderful, focused activity for the brainstorming and drafting stage of the writing process. I also think it's important that the teacher write during this time, as well (model, model, model). However, when it comes to revising, and later, editing, I think peer interaction is necessary. Students need to, for example, "rehearse" words, phrases, introductions, and thesis statements with each other during the revision stage."
Tom McHale

Common Core Practice | Drones, Stolen Art and Space Exploration - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "In a well-crafted essay, explain three ways drones would be an improvement over traditional methods. Before you do the task, you might… Pay close attention to the instructions. Understand that the prompt is asking only for ways that drones would be an improvement. Watch this video that explains additional ways that drones might be used in the future. Write down all the possible benefits to drone use explained in the article and observed in the video."
Tom McHale

STUDENT OPINION - The Learning Network Blog - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Posts connected to NY Times articles that can be used as writing prompts.
Tom McHale

150 Questions to Write or Talk About - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Love these questions as writing prompts. And if you have your students respond to them on the NY Times Learning Blog, it also becomes a writing for a real audience.
Tom McHale

Nurturing Intrinsic Motivation and Growth Mindset in Writing | Edutopia - 0 views

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    " I'd been teaching writing all wrong! I'd dangled the carrots of prizes and threatened with the sticks of docked points for misplaced modifiers. But sometimes, I also got it right. Before, I'd let students choose prompts and readings as much as possible, providing autonomy. After reading Pink, I learned to unbend myself, make deadlines more flexible, and shape the writing process more to fit the student. Now, my students feel more control over their process. Before, I'd encouraged my students to write for real audiences as summative assessments. Now, I encourage students to write to real people for real purposes throughout the school year -- their own blogs, each other, me, their principal, their Congressional representatives, and the world. Before, I'd embedded grammar instruction in writing process and had students keep their work to casually notice their progress once a year. Now, I conference four times a year with students about portfolios of their work -- an ongoing conversation about writing goals of their choosing. I explicitly teach metacognition, or how to talk and write about their writing."
Tom McHale

Overcome Self Doubt - 0 views

shared by Tom McHale on 03 Nov 15 - No Cached
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    Literary quotations with related writing prompts
Tom McHale

Learning to see beyond first sight - Nieman Storyboard - 0 views

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    "We are trying out a new feature. Call it writing practice (with a nod to Natalie Goldberg's "Writing Down the Bones," where I first encountered the term). Or virtual workshopping.  Or maybe simply shop class. The goal is to break down the work that goes into creating stories, and offer prompts or small suggestions to help you practice that work. The assignment: to see beyond first sight. To sit long enough in one place to get past surface impressions and personal projections, and try to see what more lie before them. To draw on their other senses: sound, smell, taste, touch. Finally to see even beyond those physical senses to memory, metaphor, history and emotion. In other words, to see the possibility of stories. To notice, question, wonder - and write it all down."
Tom McHale

Teaching English in the Age of Trump - POLITICO Magazine - 0 views

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    ""The best literary precedent for what we're enduring now is not the static image of Big Brother but the turbulent eruptions of King Lear," wrote the Washington Post's Ron Charles in May. Or is it The Handmaid's Tale, also an Amazon top seller? Or, maybe, Brave New World? America's high school English teachers are asking the same questions. After watching the tumult of the 2016 presidential election play out inside their classrooms last year, and after a summer of hate-filled violence, many are retooling the reading lists and assignments they typically give their students. They worry that the classic high school canon doesn't sufficiently cover today's most pressing themes-questions about alienation and empathy and power-and that the usual writing prompts aren't enough to get students thinking deeper than an average cable news segment."
Tom McHale

Project Audio: Teaching Students How to Produce Their Own Podcasts - The New York Times - 0 views

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    Given the recent rise in podcast popularity, it's no surprise that audio narratives are making their way into the classroom. They offer an engaging way for teachers to merge project-based learning with digital media analysis and production skills. That's why we're announcing our first-ever Student Podcast Contest, in which we invite students to submit original podcasts, five minutes long or less, inspired by one of our 1,000-plus writing prompts. The contest will run from April 26 to May 25, so stay tuned for our official contest announcement next week In anticipation of that contest, the mini-unit below walks students through the process of analyzing the techniques that make for good storytelling, interviewing and podcasting. The activities culminate in students producing their own original podcasts.
Tom McHale

100-Plus Writing Prompts to Explore Common Themes in Literature and Life - The New York... - 0 views

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    "a list to help your students more easily connect the literature they're reading to the world around them - and to help teachers find great works of nonfiction that can echo common literary themes."
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