For my third and final unit plan this semester (critical
inquiry), I focused my students attention on using their literacy power to
promote social change within the larger community. I look forward to explaining
my unit in more detail today in class, and I can not wait to hear what everyone
else has come up with. I feel that the idea of critical inquiry should really
be the basis for our teaching, as it asks students to use their literate lives
and literacy powers for real and productive reasons. At the end of the day, if
we have our students thinking, speaking, and writing about important issues
that matter to them and to the world outside of the classroom, then we are
doing our jobs.
My
rationale for the unit (entitled “Writing for Change”) is pretty simple–I
wanted to get my students writing about meaningful topics that impact their
lives and the lives of the larger community outside of the classroom. By having
students focus on specific social issues (similarly to my non-fiction unit), I
hope to draw their thoughts beyond the classroom environment and empower their
voice to reach a larger audience. The timing of this unit, in my opinion, is
perfect. I set the unit to begin right after the STAAR test and I think
focusing on powerful writing for social change would be a wonderful shift from
the mechanical regurgitation of the STAAR test and would help refocus their
minds on authentic writing.
The
assignment itself is pretty simple–students are asked to pick a social issue
and to write a 1-2 page persuasive article about that issue for publication in
a class wide journal. It is also important to note that this will not be the
main “persuasive writing” unit, so the students will already have a base of
knowledge built around persuasive writing that I can tap into. I think this is
a way, however, to reclaim out voice as powerful and persuasive writers in
order to use our “writing for change.” The compilation of the individual
articles within a communal journal is an effort to unite our voices and use our
literacy powers to truly inject our voices into the community. Students will
engage in the act of pre-writing, a focus of my entire yearlong unit that I
think is critically important for growing writers. They will journal about
their topic and will share their journal entries with partners. They will also
engage in active peer review, an experience I hope will grow our writing
community and allow us to help each other become better writers.
Finally,
the publication day will be a true celebration, as I want students to have
pride in their work and to recognize that their writing is valid, powerful, and
important. I think this is especially important as a way to re-ignite their
writing powers after the STAAR test and before the end of the year.
I like the rationale for the unit being after STARR. It definitely will reorient the students to thinking about significant purposes for writing that matter to them, not just writing they have to do to get a passing test score. I'm interested in hearing how you will be shaping the conversations and activities leading up to, and resulting from the culminating project.
ReplyDeleteI love this Alex. Like Dr. Skerrett, I'm interested in how you will get the students to the point of choosing their topics.
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