Tasha Thomas Spartanburg Writing Project Summer 2010
so much depends upon a red exclamation point telling you Yes! this is good writing. -Carol Jago so much depends upon a red wheel barrow glazed with rain water beside the white chickens. - William Carlos Williams
What were your experiences learning to revise your writing? What tools were you given for improving your writing? As you progressed, how often did you really revise your writing? How did you measure your progression as a writer?
Read the piece provided and discuss in your group ways to revise and improve it. What are the areas that need improvement? What specific changes and additions would you make?
“But I like what I wrote the first time!” “You mean I have to change my writing?” “I like it just the way it is!”
Remember, it is no sign of weakness or defeat that your manuscript ends up in need of major surgery. This is a common occurrence in all writing, and among the best writers.
How does revision differ from editing or proofreading? What does a clear understand of revision bring to our writing? How can we make revision a natural part of our process as writers? When? How?
“Revision involves changing the meaning, content structure of style of a piece of writing rather than the more surface changes that editing demands. Revision doesn’t necessarily take place after the piece of writing is finished, but instead will most likely occur throughout the writing process.”
When students “ache with caring” about their topic, have a vested interest in the piece, the tools to improve it, and an authentic audience, they will WANT to revise!
Switch Genres Change the Beginning Change the ending Add a section (layering) Delete a Part Change the order, genre, point of view, tone, time frame, or tense Delete unnecessary words, phrases, or sentences Slow down the “hot spot” (Barry Lane) Focus on one part Break a large piece into chunks Reconsider your purpose, intent, and audience
Expand, Don’t Pad Answer your Reader’s Questions! Work toward specificity and concreteness CUT unneeded material Create patterns with paragraphs Look for sentence connections Know Yourself Sit Still! Find Your Reader [audience] See the connection between voice and mood Begin in the Middle Change Direction
1.Choose one draft you have been working on this week 2.Find an section or element of the draft that you are struggling with. 3.Choose one or more of the suggestions for revision and make a note to apply it to your piece. 4.Feel free to confer with a member of your group and ask for feedback or suggestions to guide your revision.
How do you illustrate the difference between revision and editing? Do you stress the recursive, cyclical, imperfect, never-ending nature of writing? Are you more concerned that student writing show marked improvement in content or conventions? Do you model your own revision processes?
Don’t expect to revise and publish everything Make sure students understand the difference between revision and editing Link revision to what you teach about craft Allow students to complete multiple drafts for credit Allow TIME for students to WALK AWAY from the writing and re-vision it with new perspective Encourage students to always read their work ALOUD (peer, self, you, parent, etc.—”whisper phones”) Encourage students to self-reflect and write about their writing and revision processes in their writer’s notebooks.
Conduct weekly “process shares;” talk about the “how-to” of revising Model revision in your own writing Help students build a “Toolbox” of revision strategies Create “Revision Centers” Have students use highlighters to check for sentence variety and length Work on organization by photocopying and cutting apart drafts into paragraphs or sentences Be patient.
Create and conduct Mini-Lessons focused on revising specific elements of writing based on student needs, giving students the tools and know-how to “Re- enVision” their writing Reviser’s Toolbox by Barry Lane
What will we do in the upcoming school year to ACTIVELY teach students to “re-vision” their writing? What tools and strategies will we employ?
Heard, Georgia. The Revision Toolbox: Teaching Techniques that Work. Heinemann, Jago, Carol. Cohesive Writing: When Concept is Not Enough. Heinemann, King, Stephen. On Writing. Scribner, Lane, Barry. Reviser’s Toolbox. Discover Writing Press, Noden, Harry. Image Grammar: Using Grammatical Structures to Teach Writing. Heinemann, Routman, Reggie. Invitations. Heinemann, Strong, William. Writing Incisively: Do-It-Yourself Prose Surgery. McGraw-Hill, Inc., 1991.