power
Englert, C.S., Raphael, T.E., Anderson, L.M., Anthony, H.M., Fear, K.L., & Gregg, S.L.
(1988). A case for writing intervention: Strategies for writing informational text.
Learning Disabilities Focus, 3(2), 98-113.
This is a writing strategy that organizes all steps in the writing process. It teaches
students four different organizational structures for writing papers: stories,
comparison-contrast, explanations, and problem/solution. When writing stories,
students use key story elements – Who? When? Where? What happened? How
did it end? – to organize their papers. A comparison-contrast structure includes
information about what is being compared, on what characteristic is being
compared, and how they are alike or different. Explanations involve telling how to
do something. In a problem/solution structure, a problem is identified, the cause
of the problem is explained, and the solution is stated.
Planning
• Students focus on:
The audience for the paper
The purpose
The background knowledge that is necessary to write the paper
Organizing
• Students then complete a pattern guide to help them organize their papers,
this is an organizing think sheet. This represents the text structure being
studied. A sample guide for comparison/contrast is shown in figure 1.
Writing
• The teacher demonstrates and thinks aloud to show students how to take
the information gathered in the planning and organizing steps and produce a
first draft.
Editing
• This step teaches students to critique their own writing and to identify
areas in which they need clarification or assistance, an important selfevaluation
skill.
• Editing is a two-step process involving student self-evaluation and peer
editing:
Self evaluation – students reread and evaluate their draft, starring
sections of the paper they like best and putting question marks in the
margins by passages they think may be unclear. Then, they think of
two questions to ask their peer editors.
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