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Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners

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Page 1: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners

Page 2: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

The Prompt

Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT.

Typical prompts ask students to… Respond to Literature Discuss what was learned in relation to a

specific topic - expository Persuade - Convince a reader to

believe/support a certain way of thinking

Page 3: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

Get Ready to Color Your World!

THE BUILDING BLOCK OF WRITING -

How to write an effective paragraph

Materials: When we write using the Schaffer model we use blue, black, red and green pens.

Blue is for Topic Sentences (TS)

Red is for Concrete Details (CD)

Green is for Commentary Sentences (CM)

Black is for Concluding Sentences (CS)

Page 4: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

Step 1 - The Topic SentenceThe Topic Sentence (TS) is the top bun of the

hamburger

The topic sentence is the first sentence of the paragraph.

It proclaims the main idea and contains an opinion/reasons. Usually a mildly controversial statement- something that you have to prove. It can be as brief as three words.

Page 5: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

Example Topic Sentence TS

In the fairy tale “The Three Little Pigs,” the third pig was

very wise.

Page 6: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

Step 2 - Concrete Details (CD) Concrete Details (CD) are the meat of the hamburger

CDs = Support for your TS. (facts, quotes, statistics, examples, paraphrases etc. from the text or research.

CDs can’t be argued with - a CD is evidence that supports your point

CDs can be direct quotes or paraphrased information CDs include the “stuff from the story, reading, article,

etc.”

Page 7: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

Example Concrete Detail (CD)

For example, he remembered his mother’s warning about a wolf, and built his house out of sturdy

brick.

Page 8: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

Step 3: CommentaryCommentary Sentences (CM) are the hamburger’s “extras” - the tomato, cheese, lettuce, pickle - they make it delicious!

CMs = your analysis, interpretation, inferences, opinion, explanation or insight.

CMs = the “so what?”

CMs = the stuff from your head

Page 9: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

Example Commentary Sentences(2 CMs)

The frustrated wolf gave up extremely easily after a half-hearted attempt to blow down the sturdy and intimidating brick house. This shows that the third pig was much

more intelligent than his brothers, who were devoured by the wolf.

Page 10: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

Step 4: Concluding SentenceA Concluding Sentence (CS) is the bottom bun of

the hamburger

A CS wraps up the paragraph. It brings the reader back to the original topic without repeating the same words or

summarizing.

Page 11: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

Example Concluding Sentence (CS)

The third pig of the legendary fable outsmarts not only his

brothers but the “big, bad” wolf as well.

Page 12: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

In the fairy tale “The Three Little Pigs,” the third pig was very wise. For example, he remembered his mother’s warning about a wolf and built his house out of sturdy brick. The frustrated wolf gave up extremely easily after a half-hearted attempt to blow down the sturdy and intimidating brick house. This shows that the third pig was much more intelligent than his brothers, who were devoured by the wolf. The third pig of the legendary fable outsmarts not only his brothers but the “big bad” wolf as well.

Putting it all together!

Page 13: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

That was a one chunk paragraph!What is a chunk?

A combination of CDs and CMs is called a chunk. A chunk is made up

of 3 sentences. In the sample we created the stuff “between the buns” makes up the chunk. It includes the meat (red) and the extras (green).

Page 14: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

A chunk can include different ratios of CD to CM depending on the mode of writing

The ratio is the amount of CD:CM in a body paragraph.

The typical English class ratio is 1:2 for response to literature and 2:1 for persuasive or expository writing.

A typical history ratio might be 2:1 A typical Math/Science ratio is 3:0 or 2:1

Page 15: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

1-Chunk Body or Stand Alone Paragraph Assessment EXCELLENT: 4 Engaging and clear topic sentence (topic + opinion with

engaging word choice) Specific and relevant concrete detail #1(fact/example/

“stuff from the story”) Insightful commentary (goes beyond the obvious to

make a point/explain thoughts/feelings) [minimum of 2 CM for 1 CD]

Powerful concluding sentence that communicates a lesson/message/challenge (no repetition)

ENGLISH DEPARTMENT RUBRIC FOR 1 CHUNK PARAGRAPH WITH A 1:2 RATIO - SCORE OF 4

(located on share drive)

Page 16: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

As Student Writing becomes more sophisticated what

happens?Students move from a one chunk to a two chunk paragraph Students begin weaving

Page 17: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

What is a two chunk paragraph?A two chunk paragraph is an extension of the one

chunk paragraph. The student simply adds another burger and more condiments. It looks like

this…TS

CD

CM

CM

CD

CM

CM

CS

Chunk #1

Chunk #2

Page 18: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

2-Chunk Body or Stand Alone Paragraph AssessmentEXCELLENT: 4 Engaging and clear topic sentence (topic + opinion with engaging

word choice) Specific and relevant concrete detail #1(fact/example/ “stuff from the

story”) Insightful commentary for CD #1 (goes beyond the obvious to make a

point/explain thoughts/feelings) [minimum of 2 CM for 1 CD] Specific and relevant concrete detail #2 (fact/example/ “stuff from the

story”) Insightful commentary for CD #2 (goes beyond the obvious to make a

point/explain thoughts/feelings) [minimum of 2 CM for 1 CD] Powerful concluding sentence that communicates a

lesson/message/challenge(no repetition)

ENGLISH DEPARTMENT RUBRIC FOR 2 CHUNK PARAGRAPH WITH A 1:2 RATIO -

SCORE OF 4 (located on share drive)

Page 19: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

But isn’t this all a little formulaic?

Yes, it is very formulaic. It provides students the framework for communicating their thoughts through writing. For many students this is a necessity.

The reason we selected Jane Schaffer is that the ultimate goal of the writing program is to move students who have mastered the formula toward a more sophisticated style called weaving.

Page 20: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

What is Weaving?Weaving is the goal of all writers. It

describes the ability to weave together CDs and CMs while effectively communicating

ideas through writing. Writers that effectively weave are aware of expected

ratios/balance AND can seamlessly put them together in their writing. As a teacher it is important that you recognize students who effectively weave and allow them to do so.

Page 21: Jane Schaffer Writing for Beginners. The Prompt Before writing anything a student must know the assignment - clearly read the PROMPT. Typical prompts

Are our students weaving?Some are….most aren’t. Why?

Many of our 9th students haven’t received specific feedback about their writing (via rubric etc.)

Many of our 9th and 10th grade students are very good at summarizing CD, but STRUGGLE with CM

Teachers have different expectations which is a source of frustration for students - we don’t speak the

same language.Students have trouble with organization - their

writing wanders. We ask them to master the structure before allowing them to leave it.

Students who are weaving should know it! You can ask them, in English class are you weaving?