This Lesson's Title:
Showing How to Deal with Anger
self-reflecting on a time the writers was angry while exploring details and voice
This lesson was built for WritingFix after being proposed by NNWP Teacher Consultant
Karen McGee.
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The intended "mentor text" to be used when teaching this on-line lesson is the picture book When Sophie Gets Angry--Really, Really Angry... by Molly Bang. Before writing, students should listen to and discuss the writing style of this book's author.
Check out When Sophie Gets Angry -- Really, Really Angry... at Amazon.com.
Washoe County teachers, click here to search for this book at the county library. |
Three-Sentence Overview of this Lesson:
Molly Bang’s book, When Sophie Get’s Angry—Really, Really Angry…, provides students with positive ways of dealing with anger. When students explore their own methods of dealing with anger and then talk and write about new ways of expressing that anger, they use their writing as a vehicle into their own thinking processes. This on-line prompt encourages students to generate writing ideas as a way of reflection, especially in the area of expressing feelings and modifying behavior. It also asks students to “show” themselves as they “show” their feelings and behaviors. Teachers: Click here to see the entire lesson plan.
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6-Trait Overview for this Lesson:
The focus trait in this writing assignment is idea development;
the writer’s goal is to compose lists of ideas prior to and after reading the “mentor text” to explore and modify his thinking. When the writer self-reflects to create his memory piece about an angry time, he will use “showing writing.” The support trait in this assignment is voice;
because the writer is showing himself acting on his feelings, the reader will be able to “see” the writer. |