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Teaching - English Language, Teaching - Writing, Teaching - General & Miscellaneous, Rhetoric - English Language
Coaching Writing: The Power of Guided Practice by William Strong β€” book cover

Coaching Writing: The Power of Guided Practice

by William Strong, Tom Romano
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Overview

This book presents a "coaching approach" to instruction in written language.

Synopsis

"Good coaching," William Strong explains, "enables writers, whatever their skill level, to pay attention to language and trust their meaning-making instincts. Coaching is the central activity in the 'game' of teaching (a pursuit with lifelong challenges), and it's an activity that can have a lifetime effect on language learners."

This book presents a "coaching approach" to instruction in written language - an approach that is eclectic, pragmatic, synthetic. It centers on finding balance - ways of working smarter, not harder - and thus reducing the risk of burnout in teaching. Balance implies wellness, strength, and flexibility. In pursuing balance, Strong invites teachers to consider - or revisit - practical activities, tasks, and methods for exercising language and coaching writing.

The chapters are intended as resources - not as curriculum sequences. In the first chapter, Strong discusses his work with basic writers and tells how he came to field test and use sentence-combining exercises. In Chapter 2, he provides a research-based rationale for given-language activities and illustrates many activities for connecting such work to instruction in writing and literature. And in Chapter 3, he explores the tricky issue of error in written language, outlines ideas for securing student involvement, and offers useful methods for teaching proofreading. Other chapters cover everything from paragraphing and "voice lessons" to strategies for peer-response groups, rubrics, self-assessment, and successfully managing the paper load.

Beth Karpas - VOYA

This handbook offers exercises, examples, theory, and follow-up questions on how to guide students to be better writers through focused practice, much like an athlete practices a sport. Technical, with regular references to previous research, this resource is not a text for the casual writer or writing group advisor but an appropriate book for English teachers or prospective teachers. Strong advises writing teachers to use student writing as examples in exercises, and to get students to work, write, and edit in peer groups. He recommends that teachers place a checkmark next to a line with a mistake in it, leaving it up to the student to locate the error, thus creating an opportunity for discussion and a teachable moment. A few exercises might be of use to library writing groups, but many are focused more on structure of language, punctuation, and grammar. The emphasis here is that all writing exercises must have meaning and not just be stand-alone busywork. The book is filled with former student writing samples and testimonials to Strong, making it seem that his technique is only part of his success; ultimately, he is also a good teacher, gifted at emphasizing to readers and students that what they are learning and why is as important as how to do it. Although not a necessary purchase, school libraries might want this book for their staff shelves; college libraries with teachers in training could find it more useful. Index. Charts. Biblio. 2001, Heinemann, 210p,

About the Author, William Strong

William Strong directs the Utah Writing Project at Utah State University, where he teaches courses in writing, English education, and content-area literacy. Besides authoring many articles and teaching resources on sentence combining and writing, he is the consulting author in composition for Writer's Choice (Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, 2001) and series consultant for English Matters! (Grolier, 2000).

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Editorials

VOYA

This handbook offers exercises, examples, theory, and follow-up questions on how to guide students to be better writers through focused practice, much like an athlete practices a sport. Technical, with regular references to previous research, this resource is not a text for the casual writer or writing group advisor but an appropriate book for English teachers or prospective teachers. Strong advises writing teachers to use student writing as examples in exercises, and to get students to work, write, and edit in peer groups. He recommends that teachers place a checkmark next to a line with a mistake in it, leaving it up to the student to locate the error, thus creating an opportunity for discussion and a teachable moment. A few exercises might be of use to library writing groups, but many are focused more on structure of language, punctuation, and grammar. The emphasis here is that all writing exercises must have meaning and not just be stand-alone busywork. The book is filled with former student writing samples and testimonials to Strong, making it seem that his technique is only part of his success; ultimately, he is also a good teacher, gifted at emphasizing to readers and students that what they are learning and why is as important as how to do it. Although not a necessary purchase, school libraries might want this book for their staff shelves; college libraries with teachers in training could find it more useful. Index. Charts. Biblio. 2001, Heinemann, 210p,
β€” Beth Karpas

Book Details

Published
September 1, 2001
Publisher
Heinemann
Pages
224
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780867095074

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