6+1 Trait Writing

From site:  In the early 1980’s, creative teachers in school districts across the country decided there must be a better way to gather useful information about student writing performance rather than with single scores or standardized tests. Teachers wanted an instrument that would provide accurate, reliable feedback to students and teachers, a tool that would help guide instruction. When an exhaustive search didn’t produce such a tool, they rolled up their sleeves and began the difficult process of creating an analytic scoring system that would be valid, honest, and practical.

After evaluating thousands of papers at all grade levels, the teachers identified common characteristics of good writing. These qualities became the framework for the 6-trait analytical model, which has now grown to include a seventh, +1 trait. The model uses common language to identify the traits year to year as we refine our idea of what ‘good’ writing looks like by using the scoring guides.

Not everyone uses the 6+1 Trait model : ideas, organization, voice, word choice, sentence fluency, conventions, and presentation. Some use four; some use more. These same six or seven characteristics show up on everyone’s list in one form or another. The 6+1 Trait components are the foundation for the NWREL’s writing assessment model and the basis for the descriptive criteria we use to define the qualities of good writing at different levels of achievement.

Online Writing Lab

This site has extensive writing resources for students in grades 7-12 and their teachers. There are tips and examples on the writing process, rhetoric and logic, different kinds of essay genres, style and language, and different citation formats. Find guidance on the mechanics of writing, and for subject-specific, research-based, and common writing assignments.

Another section discusses steps you can take to avoid plagiarism.

Summary Writing

From site: 

The ability to summarize information is one of the most important critical thinking skills you can develop.  Taking large quantities of information, understanding what the information means, and condensing it into a shorter version of the original allows you to have important information on hand for easy reference without having to memorize long passages or complex statistics.

LearningReviews.com note:  This interactive provides guidance on writing a summary, examples of well-written and poorly written summaries, and passages for the students to summarize, print and turn in to a teacher for assessment.

Guide to Writing a Basic Essay

From site:  

An essay can have many purposes, but the basic structure is the same no matter what. You may be writing an essay to argue for a particular point of view or to explain the steps necessary to complete a task.

Either way, your essay will have the same basic format.

If you follow a few simple steps, you will find that the essay almost writes itself. You will be responsible only for supplying ideas, which are the important part of the essay anyway.

Don’t let the thought of putting pen to paper daunt you.

Biography Maker

From site: 

The Biography Maker  is like those homework machines we have been hearing about for many years. It is designed to help you convert facts into insights, dull and boring information into fascination and magic. It will help you do a good job, but you must provide some of the “steam” to make it work well.

The Biography Maker is meant to inspire lively story telling and vivid writing which will make your readers want to know more about your subject….

To create an exciting biography, you will now follow these steps:
1. Questioning; 2. Learning; 3. Synthesis; 4. Story-Telling: Six Traits of Effective Writing

 

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