|
|
|
|
| Overview |
Students
write a persuasive letter to the editor of a newspaper, focusing on a current
local or national issue and requesting a specific action or response from readers.
The lesson includes an exploration of the genre, a review of persuasive writing
structure and letter format, and an emphasis on multi-draft writing.
If desired, students can mail their letters to the newspapers, giving the project the potential of publication outside the classroom.
|
| From Theory to Practice |
In “Putting Writing to Work,” Marjorie G. Keil quotes Vygotsky as
she explains, “‘teaching
should be organized in such a way that reading and writing are necessary . .
. [and that] writing should be incorporated into a task . . . necessary and relevant
for life’ (118)”; then, she goes on to assert that when reading and
writing are “performed
solely as an academic exercise, the composing process becomes an endurance test
of any writer’s self-discipline, time-management, and motivation” (168). By
writing letters on issues that they care about to an authentic audiences of readers,
students completing this activity have the opportunity to go beyond an “academic
exercise” to writing that matters—to them and to their readers.
Further Reading
Keil, Marjorie G.
“Putting Writing to Work.” Teaching English in the Two-Year College. 26.2
(December 1998): 168–173.
|
| Student Objectives |
Students will
- choose and research a current local or national issue.
- review persuasive writing structure and business letter format.
- determine the criteria for effective letters.
- explore the ways that purpose and audience influence a message.
- develop arguments and support ideas with evidence.
|
| Instructional Plan |
Resources
Preparation
Instruction and Activities
Session One
- Explain that the class will be completing a unit on letters to the editor.
- Ask students to share any experiences that they have with letters to the editor of newspapers or magazines that they read.
- Pass out newspapers to the class, and ask students to find the letters to the editor in their papers.
- Give students a few minutes to skim through the letters, and jot down characteristics that they see in the letters.
- Gather the class and ask them to share the characteristics that they have noted. Record their observations on the board or on chart paper.
- Be sure that students notice the connections between the letters and the various articles in the newspaper. Some letters directly respond to previously published articles, others respond generally to topics covered in the newspapers, and some focus on general issues of interest to the newspaper’s readers.
- Emphasize that students will have the opportunity to choose topics that interest them for their letters, based on articles that they find in a current issue of the newspaper.
- Have students spend 15–20 minutes skimming the newspapers and reading any articles that grab their attention.
- After students have had the opportunity to explore their newspapers, arrange the class into small groups.
- In these groups, ask students to discuss the topics and articles that interested them with one another.
- Ask students to choose one of the articles for their focus, and complete the Newspaper Article Summary Questions for that article.
- Collect the Newspaper Article Summary Questions at the end of the session, and review the work before the next session. Provide any feedback as necessary.
- For homework, have students read all the letters to the editor in their copy of the newspaper. Ask students to pay attention to the characteristics which the letters have in common and what features makes a letter successful.
Session Two
- Begin with a review of the activities that students completed in the previous session.
- Share any general feedback on the topics that students have chosen, based on your review of the Newspaper Article Summary Questions, and pass back the sheets to students.
- Answer any questions that students have on the project at this point.
- Ask the class to share characteristics that they noticed as they read the letters to editor for homework. Record their responses on the board or on chart paper.
- If necessary, ask questions such as the following to guide students’ observations:
- What did you notice about the organization of the letters?
- How were details used in the letters?
- What kind of details were used?
- How do the letters persuade their readers?
- Which letters seemed best?
- What is the difference between an acceptable letter and a great letter?
- Once the list is fairly complete, review the items, and make any additions or corrections.
- Ask students to suggest general categories that fit the characteristics (e.g., formatting issues, structure, ideas).
- Arrange the characteristics into these general categories, creating a checklist or rubric for students’ letters.
- Pass out copies of the Persuasion
Map Planning Sheet, and use the information to analyze a letter
to the editor from one of the newspapers.
- Demonstrate how to use the Persuasion
Map to begin gathering and organizing ideas for students’ letters.
- Allow students
the rest of the session to begin planning their papers with the Persuasion
Map.
- Remind students to refer their Newspaper Article Summary
Questions as
useful.
- As students work, circulate through the room, providing feedback and support.
- If time allows, review the first sentences of several letters from the editor,
and ask students point out the similarities between the sentences. Based on
these examples, have students write their own sentences. Review the way to
punctuate the titles of articles and the newspapers in these opening sentences.
- If desired, point students to one or more of the Guidelines
for Composing Letters to the Editor listed in the Web Resources below.
- For homework, ask students to compose a first draft of their letters. Explain
that the letters will be exchanged for peer review during the next session.
Session Three
- Review the criteria for effective letters to the editor that students created
during the previous session, and answer any questions that students have about
the project or their drafts.
- Pass out copies of the Letter to the Editor Peer Review Questions.
- Arrange
students in pairs, and ask partners to exchange and read one another’s
drafts.
- After reading the drafts, have them fill out the Letter to the Editor
Peer Review Questions to provide feedback.
- After students have shared
and received feedback, allow time for the students to revise their drafts.
- For homework, ask students to revise their drafts, based on the feedback
that they have received. Explain that students will type their final drafts
during the next class session.
Session Four
- Review the criteria for effective letters to the editor that students created,
and answer any questions that students have about the project or their drafts.
-
Focus students’ attention on reading their drafts for minor errors before
students move to type their letters.
- Remind students to punctuate the title of their articles in quotation marks,
to italicize newspaper titles, and to place direct quotations from the article
in quotation marks. If desired, use the ReadWriteThink lesson plan Inside
or Outside? A Mini-Lesson on Quotation Marks and More as a mini-lesson
at this point.
- Demonstrate the Letter
Generator, which students will use to publish their letters.
- Allow the rest of the session for students to type and print their letters.
- Collect students’ letters, worksheets, and drafts at the end of the
session.
- If desired, ask students to print two copies of their letters, and mail
one copy of each letter to the newspapers that students are responding to.
Extensions
- As a book report alternative, have students write letters to the editor from
the perspective of a character in a book they have read.
- After writing their letters, have students conduct research on the issues
that they have chosen. The letters can serve as students’ preliminary
thoughts on the issue. Challenge each student to find at least 3 library resources
on the issue and use those resources to expand the letter into a more formal
proposal for changes that readers should consider making or actions that they
should consider taking.
- Modify the lesson by assigning students topics for their letters. If you
prefer to use fictional topics, use or adapt the ideas listed on Traci's
18th List of Ten: Ten Persuasive Prompts: Persuasive-Descriptive.
Web Resources
- Today’s Front Pages
http://www.newseum.org/todaysfrontpages/
- This Newseum page includes images of the front page of hundreds of newspapers. Most pages include links to online sites for the specific newspaper.
- Guidelines for Composing Letters to the Editor
- How to Communicate with Journalists, from FAIR
Tips on Writing Letters to the Editor, from the Humane Society
Tips on Writing Letters to the Editor, from the ACLU
Tips for Writing Letters to the Editor, from NCTE
|
| Student Assessment/Reflections |
Check drafts
and worksheets for completion and effort. Look in particular for indications
of improvement over the series of drafts that students complete for the assignment.
Assess students’ final drafts using the criteria for effective letters
to the editor that students created during the second session of the lesson. If
you prefer a more formal rubric, use the Persuasive Letter Rubric.
|
1 - Students read a wide range of print and nonprint texts to build an understanding of texts, of themselves, and of the cultures of the United States and the world; to acquire new information; to respond to the needs and demands of society and the workplace; and for personal fulfillment. Among these texts are fiction and nonfiction, classic and contemporary works.
3 - Students apply a wide range of strategies to comprehend, interpret, evaluate, and appreciate texts. They draw on their prior experience, their interactions with other readers and writers, their knowledge of word meaning and of other texts, their word identification strategies, and their understanding of textual features (e.g., sound-letter correspondence, sentence structure, context, graphics).
4 - Students adjust their use of spoken, written, and visual language (e.g., conventions, style, vocabulary) to communicate effectively with a variety of audiences and for different purposes.
5 - Students employ a wide range of strategies as they write and use different writing process elements appropriately to communicate with different audiences for a variety of purposes.
6 - Students apply knowledge of language structure, language conventions (e.g., spelling and punctuation), media techniques, figurative language, and genre to create, critique, and discuss print and nonprint texts.
7 - Students conduct research on issues and interests by generating ideas and questions, and by posing problems. They gather, evaluate, and synthesize data from a variety of sources (e.g., print and nonprint texts, artifacts, people) to communicate their discoveries in ways that suit their purpose and audience.
8 - Students use a variety of technological and information resources (e.g., libraries, databases, computer networks, video) to gather and synthesize information and to create and communicate knowledge.
12 - Students use spoken, written, and visual language to accomplish their own purposes (e.g., for learning, enjoyment, persuasion, and the exchange of information).
|
|
|