Or for any teacher! Links I've found so far- in writing.com and on the world wide web. |
WARNING:Check these out before you send kids to any of these. Some I have only skimmed. Check for appropriateness for your own students. Here at Writing.com: Reference: How to use Writing.com:
Nice concise list of poetry styles & how to write them:
Writing.com-specific tips for getting the most out of features of the site- look especially at tips under "getting attention":
Teach your kids not to plagiarize. Written at high school/advanced Jr. High level, but an essential thing for ALL students to understand up front:
Help generating names for your characters. I think the links of names from particular historical eras would be especially helpful when writing historical fiction. Also nifty fantasy name generators (Including hobbits, dwarves & elves for all you Tolkien fanatics!):
Writing activities
follow up activities for the previous one:
Not all appropriate for kids. This is a parent resource:
On the World Wide Web Reference: For letter-writing!: http://www.addresses.com/celebrity_email.php Helps kids write their own crossword puzzles: http://www.happychild.org.uk/wks/english/ssm/crosswords01.htm Rhyming dictionary & thesaurus: http://www.rhymezone.com/?loc=top Word Frequency Counter: find out if you are over-using certain words! This sure would have come in handy with one of my kids- I hand counted 26 "their"'s in just one of her papers!: http://www.georgetown.edu/faculty/ballc/webtools/web_freqs.html An incredibly huge list of articles on a myriad of aspects of creating your own world, for fantasy/sci.fi. writers. I've barely scratched the surface of these, but the ones I read would be excellent reading assignments for high schoolers interested in this genre. I suspect I'll be using these for ideas for a fantasy writing unit: http://www.seventhsanctum.com/www/wwwfull.html Not exactly a writing resource, but this is a Library of Congress listing of "Poetry 180": a poem to read a day, for high schoolers. You may get ideas here: http://www.loc.gov/poetry/180/p180-list.html Writing activities This is my all-time favorite resource for high school or jr. high. A whole list of quality writing activites & lists of topics: http://www.home.cogeco.ca/~rayser3/writing.htm#biogr a great story generator for uninspired or younger kids: http://www.seventhsanctum.com/generate.php?Genname=storygen from the same people: http://www.seventhsanctum.com/generate.php?Genname=writechallenge more good story starters: http://www.tellingtales.com/Stufftodo/Starters/StoryStarters-Frame.htm several styles of story starters: http://www.stuartstories.com/activities.html Biography maker- very thorough!: http://www.bham.we.dnet.edu/bio/QUEST.HTM Kind of wild, random story-starters: http://www.lifeformz.com/cgi-bin/idea/idea.cgi great Poetry Slam lesson http://www.pbs.org/newshour/extra/features/jan-june00/poetryboxlessonplanone.htm... Poetry Lesson Plan 1: Using a Poetry Slam to Teach the Mechanics of Poetry: Link to lesson plan http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/17107 |