At last, after a month of exciting classes and passionate writing, it is time to start sharing our Ghana student life story projects with you!For teachers who are interested in this unit plan themselves, or for those who are just curious about how these upcoming student articles were created, here is the...
Unit Plan for Student Life Story Writing Project:
Note: Each of these steps takes a different amount of time depending on your particular students. You may choose to do one step per class or bunch several together into one class.
1.) Introduce the Objective of the project: To create an engaging, detail-filled article about an important or influential event in your life so that readers around the world can peek into your life experience!
(Teachers using this unit plan in their own classrooms: feel free to use the subsequent Ghana student articles if you deem them exemplary.)
3.) Pre-Writing Brainstorm 1: Possible Article Topics.
In the center of their paper, have students draw a small circle, and inside it write: "Important Moments in my Life."
Next, have them create a brainstorm web or wheel with at least five circles (or bubbles) with important life moments written inside them which radiate out from the central bubble. See the photo, below, for an approximation of what this should look like. By the next class, students should have at least ten brainstorm bubbles.
If students know each other well, pair them up for a five minute peer consultation where they look over each others' brainstorms and suggest any events that are missing from them.
4.) Pre-Writing Brainstorm 2: Details of a Selected Event.
Time to select the topic for the first article! Have students look over their topic brainstorms and select one that will be the subject of their first piece. Have them put a star next to it, then go around the class to share topics out loud.
Now, create a new brainstorm web with the selected topic in the center circle. (Ex: My first time using the internet.)At the top of the paper, have students copy the following title: Things I saw, smelled, tasted, touched, felt, thought, heard (sounds as well as "quotes"), and learned.
Next, have students write at least five bubbles in the web brainstorming these details about their chosen event.
(Ex 1: My brother said: "I will never speak to you again if you do that!")
(Ex 2: I saw the entire field was covered with plastic wrappers)
Refer back to the exemplar article to show how these details will be used in the writing and why they're important in making the reader feel engaged in the article. Have students share some of their spiciest details aloud.
5.) Drafting: Using a Middle-Beginning-End Structure.
Examining the exemplar article, note that an engaging article usually begins in the middle of the story, at the most exciting or shocking point, in order to grab the reader's attention.
Have students scan their second brainstorm to select the most thrilling lead moment. After giving some examples of good leads, have students write their article's gripping first line, sharing some aloud.
Demonstrate with the exemplar that after the lead moment, the article author must then go back in time to give the background details of the story, so the reader will not remain confused.
The subsequent paragraphs will then be explaining the story as it unfolded, using as many details from the five senses as possible! This is a good time to do several lessons on using quotations, and on explaining sights, sounds, smells, touches, and thoughts in specific detail rather than vague statements like, "The building was nice."
Instruct students to ensure that in the last paragraph, the reader has some sort of closure. Though it doesn't need to be tritely spelled out, there should be some sort of lesson or conclusion drawn from the experience explained in the article.
6.) Revising, Editing, Typing, and Formatting.
This is also the hardest step if your school has limited computers, as students will need to patiently wait their turn to type.
But you will get it done! And once the first students have created and published their articles, it is very motivating for the other students to clearly see their goal.
During this time, teach mini-lessons on common grammatical and conceptual errors you are noticing during one-on-one conferences. Ones I've seen here are verb tense confusion, and lack of adequate detail for the reader to really feel like they're there in the moment.The final step is to format the articles, and to snap the glamorous author photos!
So there's the unit plan! Next stop: the first round of completed Ghana student life story articles!


Looking forward to the articles!
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