Smekens Education Access logo

Dynamic Mini-Lessons for Teaching Writing

SECRET SITE

Deliver Dynamic Mini-Lessons

Plan the 4 essential steps

STEP 1:
Puff Up the Pre-Write

STEP 2:
Puff Up the Pre-Write

STEP 3:
Puff Up the Pre-Write

STEP 4:
Puff Up the Pre-Write

Present skills in a multi-day series

Mini-Lesson Planning Template

3-Day Mini-Lesson Series | Word doc

Fit writing into your schedule

ELEMENTARY | Integrate the Writer’s Workshop within the subject area.

Identify Skills to  Teach

Teach trait-based writing skills

Launching the Writer's Workshop

Utilize Mentor Text

Collect student writing samples

Identify excerpts from published texts

Make intentional connections between reading and writing by showing mentor text whenever beginning a new writing genre.

Trait Trackers identify how excerpts from the same picture book can be used to reveal evidence of all six traits.

Purchase Ruth Culham’s book with a suggested list of mentor texts appropriate for primary and middle school teachers.

Integrate mentor text into lessons

Make Lessons Visible

Increase engagement with visual triggers

Grade Range

K-2

3-12

K-2

K-5

K-8

K-8

K-12

K-12

3-12

3-12

3-12

3-12

3-12

3-12

6-12

Trigger/Object

Balloon

Balloon

Wooden blocks

Middle train car(s)

Giant magic straw

Yo-Yo

Cheerios box

Bow on a present

Nesting boxes

Space-saver bag

Table

List paper

Flipbook

Slinky

3-Course meal

Toying with Writing and Toying With Writing, Too/Two detail mini-lessons for writing that all include a suggested toy or object to use as a visual trigger.

Organize Lesson Materials

Create a Writing Crate of lesson resources

Manage Writer’s Notebooks

Maximize the efficiency & efficacy of students’ notebooks

Add a quick-find bookmark with a piece of ribbon taped to the spine of a composition notebook.

Create a pocket by folding over a page and gluing it to the next one.

Add a pocket by adhering a small envelope to the inside front or back cover of a composition book.

Consider the flexibility of loose paper when creating a writer’s notebook. The “spolder” idea is a great one for those who have access to a comb-binding machine.

Use 1 folder with tabs and 1-3 additional pocket folders without tabs. Turn the pocket folders inside out and hole-punch them. Using the tabs, fasten them together.

Each pocket folder provides two more sections of storage within the writer’s notebook.

Practice skills within previous drafts