We Are Writers

This slice is part of the Slice of Life on  Two Writing Teachers! #sol24. I’m slicing on as many Tuesdays as I can. I hope you’ll join me.

After school I hung up the slice we wrote in writing today, on a hastily made purple construction paper backing.

I titled it, “We Are Writers.”

We had written “From My Chair” slices to start out our writing time today.

I called it a “Writing warm up.”

Because this morning as I finished my coffee I wrote myself a goal sheet, and one of the goals was to actually do the warm-up writing I had planned to do each day.

“Friends,” I said, “we are ready to start doing writing warm-ups after recess.”

Then I thanked the kids who had their “Slices and Sparks” notebooks and a pencil out on their desk, because I had a giant “You need:” and a picture of their Slices and Spark notebook and a pencil on the board.

“This is one of my favorite slices because you can always write it. You can even write it when you don’t know what to write!”

I modeled one quickly for them, and had them get started to. They could choose to do this, or a “Rose and Thorn” slice. All but one or two tried the “From My Chair.”

When we started sharing them, I was, of course, in love with the poetry children create when they write.

“We have to make this into a collaborative poem. Choose your favorite lines to add to our class poem. If you didn’t write this kind of slice, write just one line now to share.”

We shared, I typed, we read our poem together. It was beautiful.

“Maybe we should keep writing on this page more and more slices!” Someone suggested

“Isn’t this just a warm-up?” Someone asked.

“I can’t wait to send this poem home in our class newsletter this week!” I said, and I nodded to answer his question.

“Or maybe you should just print it out.” They suggested.

They are very good at suggestions.

So I printed it out and our student teacher went to get it.

We needed a little break, a little change up from writing.
This was obvious, and if you are a teacher you know what I mean.

I gathered them to finish our read aloud book.

“But, wasn’t that just a writing warm-up?” Someone asked again, wondering, as I’m sure you are, why our warm-up took almost all of writing today.

“Yep, yep, yep.” I said, trying to figure out how to explain my flexible, responsive teaching plans to an 8 year old.

With 10 minutes left of writing, I had no other option. We got out our writing folders, our small moment story designs, and I passed out paper.

“Writers,” I said, “Let’s get started writing these beginnings! You have 8 minutes!”

I’m not saying that was my proudest teacher-of-writing moment. 8 minutes?

Tomorrow, we will do more story writing, I promise. It’s in the plans!

Tomorrow, our warm-up will not take almost half an hour.

Tomorrow, when kids walk into the classroom, I hope they see my purple construction paper sign with their published slice of life.

3 thoughts on “We Are Writers

  1. This is amazing! I was a middle school ELA teacher and this makes me miss those writing moments where the kids would really get into it, and you’re right! You can’t explain flexible teaching until it happens and even then, you don’t fight it, you just go with it. I love that they were so excited about your writing warm-up!

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