Is That a Fact?
Foreword by Tomie dePaola. While “what I did for…” essays and “my favorite animal” reports are fail-safes for primary grade writing assignments, they do not provide a journey into nonfiction writing that children at this age are capable of enjoying. Tony Stead—international literacy expert and former elementary teacher—shares successful strategies that introduce a variety of authentic purposes for nonfiction writing and their forms. By creating letters, poetry, captions, directions, and interviews, budding writers will explain, describe, instruct, persuade, and retell informational narratives with eagerness. Stead includes exercises for whole class, small group, and independent engagement, student examples, and a comprehensive assessment rubric. The extensive resource section includes blackline masters.
* Reviews *
Is That a Fact? Teaching Nonfiction Writing K-3 by Tony Stead gives me hope. Stead actually believes that primary students can compose a variety of nonfiction texts including recipes, reports, scientific explanations, and even persuasive arguments. Stead addresses barriers many teachers face when teaching nonfiction forms, including the difficulties of helping children locate, access, interpret, record, publish, and share information. He also considers another obstacle: getting young children to write independently. Is That a Fact? Teaching Nonfiction Writing K-3 is a resource that respects young students and their teachers. Kim Douillard, National Writing Project, The Quarterly, Volume 24, No. 4Why wait until middle school to teach children informational writing? Stead provides lessons, bibliographies of nonfiction books, and detailed rubrics for teaching primary students to write a variety of nonfiction genres, including instructions, reports, scientific explanations, persuasive writing, and nonfiction narratives.Kathleen Cali, LEARN NC, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Education