A good formal student writing prompt includes all information
students need to develop an appropriate response to a writing
assignment without coming back to bug you for more detail.
The value of good prompts is not just that they reduce the hassle-factor
(although thats important). They also build students
confidence in their ability to write competently.
If students dont have to ask how to start writing, they are
more likely to believe they can finish. Students who dont
think they can write are often unwilling to make any effort.
What do you need to put in a student writing prompt to give that
sense of you can do this? There are five essentials
for every formal writing prompt and two good-to-include items.
Essential Components
1. Topic
The topic is what the student is going to write about. The topic
should be a noun or noun phrase, like
To make sure the topic is clear, use it at least twice in
the writing prompt three times is even better.
Of course, expository writing topics
should be connected to study topics within your curriculum.
2. Context
Dont assume students will know how you are using terms. Put
your topic and other important terms in context. If you are
going to have students write about scales, they need to know whether
you mean musical scales, fish scales, or platform balance
scales.
Think of the opening of your writing prompt as opening a conversation.
You share something from your perspective to provide a context for
your question. A conversational opening suggests you think
students actually have something worthwhile to offer.
Not only is that good pedagogy, but it is good manners. Nobody
likes being put on the spot. And we all like being treated as contributing
members of our community.
3. Potential assertions
In authentic writing prompts, the choice of potential assertions
about the topic is always limited. Therefore, each you should indicate
in each student writing prompt the pool of potential assertions
from which students can select something to say about the topic.
For beginning writers, you might
deliberately limit the pool to one or two options. That will
let them write a thesis statement quickly by adding an assertion
to the topic. Once students get the hang of thesis building, you
can give them more freedom to choose
their own assertions.
Here are some examples of language that indicates the range
of potential assertions:
In each case, the students choices of potential assertions
from which to compose a thesis statement are restricted to a greater
or lesser degree.
4. Audience
For most school writing, the teacher is the audience. If there
is another real or imaginary audience, the writing prompt
needs to specity the audience.
If you specify an audience other than yourself, it should be an
audience students know or can easily learn about. That's part of
being fair.
5. Format
Tell students what format their response should take. Should they
write a paragraph? A five-paragraph essay? A 10-page sourced paper?
Even if the formatting requirements are exactly the same for every
formal writing assignment for the whole year, put them into every
student writing prompt.
Why?
For one thing, it builds familiarity and comfort for students.
Also, if someone outside your classroom needs to see your assignments,
you already have everything together.
Recommended elements
In addition to these five essentials, there are two other elements
I recommend you add to a student writing prompt for major papers:
resources and housekeeping details.
Resources
Resources are aids students can consult for help with the
assignment. The number one resource in my estimation is the rubric
you plan to use for evaluating the assignment. It ought to be written
so students can use it as a checklist for determining whether theyve
done everything they needed to do for the assignment.
Other resources could include
-
Sample responses.
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Team members for collaborative work.
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Websites for information.
-
Materials on reserve in the library.
Notes about sections in their texts that they could use.
The list will naturally vary with the assignment.
Sometimes you may want to specify resources that are not
appropriate for students to use for the assignment. For example,
you may not want them using Wikipedia, the Encyclopedia
Britannica, or their class textbook as sources.
Housekeeping details
By housekeeping details, I mean things such as
Writing a good prompt is not rocket science. You can write good
prompts almost as easily as you can write crummy ones and
the good ones will greatly simplify the task of teaching writing.
Click to see a good
student writing prompt (and one poor one).
created 23-Apr-2008; updated: 16-Sep-2008