Notebooking
One of the best ways for a student
to understand a topic is to write about it. Students
must comprehend the material, restructure the
new information, and then share their new understanding. Writing to Learn is much more than
an accumulation of report writing; it helps students
think and learn carefully and completely. Writing
assignments are about creating both ideas and
learning.
Writing to Learn
The Heart of Wisdom Unit Studies focus on Writing to Learn. During writing assignments, students
learn how to assess information and determine
its appropriateness, to evaluate and compare,
analyze and discern, add their own feelings, organize
information, and communicate conclusions. Through
these processes, students learn to manage and
use information to solve problems, interrelate
knowledge, and effectively communicate learning
outcomes. Students develop excellence in achievement
by producing the required quality assignments;
they develop diligence by continually practicing
clarity, accuracy, relevance, prioritizing, consistency,
depth, and breadth through writing activities. Charlotte Mason's narration methods
for younger children involve telling back
favorite stories read by parents.

In later years,
students progress to reading passages and telling
back in verbal or written form what they
have learned. Talking it out, whether aloud or
on paper, helps students think. Often teachers use writing as
a way of testing. They use it to find out what
students already know, rather than as a way of
encouraging them to learn. But the active processes
of seeking information, compiling notes, and evaluating,
analyzing, and organizing content, as well as
the processes of personal reflection, choosing
and constructing words, and expressing ideas in
writing, are valuable learning tools which students
will use the rest of their lives.
Catherine Copley explains in The
Writer's Complex:
Writing provides food
for thoughtit enables you to knead small,
half-baked words and sentences into great big
loaves of satisfying thought that then lead to
more thoughts. Developing ideas involves getting
some ideasin whatever formonto paper
or screen so you can see them, return to them,
explore them, question them, share them, clarify
them, change them, and grow them. It really is
almost like growing plants or kneading bread and
waiting for the results: plant the seed, start
the process, and then let your mind, including
your unconscious, take over. Go to sleep and let
your dreaming continue to develop your ideas.
Humans were born to think; it's almost impossible
to stop us. Writing helps us to bring all that
activity into consciousness, helps to clarify
and direct our thinking, and generate more thinking.
Writing, thinking, and learning are part of the
same process.2
Writing
Summaries/ A Narration Method
Several
activities in Heart of Wisdom recommend the student
to read passages (particularly Bible passages)
and write a summary. This is an excellent way
to tell how well people understand something they
have read. This method is almost always required
preparation for deeper thinking, and is an important
tool for research writing. Adding summary writing
to a study routine will increase the students
ability to understand and remember what has been
read. Knowing how to write a summary
is an essential skill for studying and writing
in college. A good summary captures the essence
of a piece of writing in your own words and indicates
the degree to which you understand what you have
read.
Writing summaries helps you understand your
sources, reduces your reliance on the words of
others, and helps integrate the ideas and information
of others into your own thinking.
As with most
writing, the length of your summary is determined
by its purpose and audience. To write a concise, accurate summary
means you first achieve basic understanding of
the material you have read and then carefully
paraphrase the selection. One reading will not,
in all likelihood, enable you to write a good
summary. Using reading strategies including previewing,
skimming, and scanning, read your material several
times, locating the main idea in each paragraph.
Highlight and then write down the main ideas,
in order, on a separate piece of paper. Always
plan on writing and rewriting this information
so that you can condense, arrange, and write the
summary in the best fashion. Rewrite and reread,
and then select, eliminate, and add information.
Remember, the summary is conveying in your own
words (paraphrasing) the meaning of what you have
read, using the fewest number of words and sentences,
and without your subjective opinion. Be objective, as you are writing a summary of what the author
stated, not your feelings or evaluation of the
material. (Linares)
Informal
or Free Writing
Informal or Free Writing is probably
the easiest to implement of all writing-to-learn
activities. In its basic form free writing is
simply writing down everything that comes to mind,
usually for five or ten minutes without stopping. "Focused free writing," which uses some kind of
prompt "a term, an issue, a question, or a problem," is useful for the thematic units in this curriculum.
This type of writing is unconstrained by any need
to appear correct in public. It is not yet arranging,
asserting, and arguing. It is still reflecting
and questioning. This is probative, speculative,
generative thinking that is written in class or
at home to develop the language of learning. It
may not always be read by a teacher. Specifically,
informal written language will help your student
to:
Develop abilities to define,
classify, summarize, question, generate criteria,
establish inferences, imagine hypotheses, analyze
problems, and identify procedures.
-
Improve methods of recording
and reporting data (observing), of organizing
and structuring data into generalizations, of
formulating theories, and of recognizing and
applying the "methods"
themselves.
-
Learn about central concepts,
problem-solving, thinking, learning, language,
and about knowledge itself, while developing
the ability to question, to create problems
and solutions, to wonder, and to think for oneself.
-
Understand ones own
beliefs and attitudes toward learning, toward
knowing oneself, toward one's work, toward mistakes
and errors, toward the knowledge and opinions
of others, and toward the attitudes that affect
behaviors.
Journals Assignments
Journals Assignments can be gathered together
in a "learning log" or other type of journal.
A more powerful type of journal is the "double-entry"
or "dialogic" journal in which students copy down
quotes, facts, or concepts from the unit study
in one column, and write responses, questions,
and insights in the next column or on the facing
page. In this way the writer engages in an ongoing
dialogue with the material, an ancient but still
essential activity of serious intellectual life
in any academic field or profession.
Samples
of Writing Assignments in Heart of Wisdom Lessons:
Write a letter to a person
studied in the unit
-
Keep a diary or journal as
if written by someone in the unit
-
Write a news article about
an event in the unit
- Make a scrapbook page about what you have learned
-
Create a web site about the
unit
-
Make a mind map about the
unit theme
-
Write a summary about a concept
learned during the unit study
Writing Links
Footnotes1. For more on this subject see
the Writing to Learn chapter in Writers
INC or Writing to Learn by William Zinsser, HarperCollins;
ISBN: 0062720406.
2. Copley, Catherine. (1995) The Writer's Complex,
Empire State College <http://www.esc.edu/htmlpages/writer/copley/hmpg.htm>
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