Synopses & Reviews
Review
"This book provides the reader with a brilliant blend of research and practice. It is full of teaching ideas which are solidly grounded in current research on writing. Writing teachers who read this book will get lots of help explaining to parents and administrators why they make the classroom choices they do. James Collins demonstrates with extraordinary lucidity how writing research over the past few decades can be used to transform the teaching and learning of writing. Students exposed to Collins' ideas will benefit immeasurably. His poignant stories of how struggling writers gain confidence and improve their skills provide maps that can guide teachers as they teach their most difficult-to-reach students. Throughout, Collins argues cogently for blending skills instruction and process instruction and offers teachers many ideas for how to make the blend work in their classrooms." --Sarah Warshauer Freedman, PhD, School of Education, University of California, Berkeley
"Why have we taken so long to see that struggling writers need both acculturation and strong strategies, both immersion in our 'natural' process and freedom to learn in ways that may seem 'natural' to them? James Collins' argument is framed by a lucid and generous account of the debate in composition research but grounded in his insightful grasp of the logic of real learners. He convinces you that teaching can make a difference--and his vivid stories of Jason, the saxophone, Shawna, and others reveal how." --Linda Flower, PhD, Professor of Rhetoric; Director, Center for University Outreach, Carnegie Mellon University
"Based on extensive research with students who struggle with writing, Collins provides a cogent theoretical framework and concrete strategies for helping these students cope with their writing difficulties. He goes beyond both traditional cognitive-processing and process approaches to ground strategy instruction within supportive social contexts involving modeling of strategies, joint problem-solving, meta-cognitive awareness, and purposeful writing assignments. His writing activities consistently build on students' use of multiple intelligences by drawing on visual/spatial charts and diagrams and on relating oral and written discourse. And, he uses a series of vivid case-study profiles to illustrate how students coping with a range of difficulties, including outright resistance to writing, benefit from the use of strategic instruction." --Richard Beach, PhD, University of Minnesota
"James Collins provides an exciting, research-based alternative to the extreme positions usually taken in the process-product debate. For at least two decades, teachers have felt compelled to emphasize either process or product in writing instruction. Both approaches have resulted in limited success for writers who struggle to express their ideas. In this book, Collins cogently argues for a more effective approach to teaching students in grades five through twelve. Teachers will appreciate the reconciliation between extreme positions that strategic writing instruction provides. They will also value the respect that Collins shows for the differences rather than the deficiencies of individual learners. This is a powerful approach to teaching and learning as demonstrated by transcripts of conferences with students and observations by teacher-researchers implementing this approach. Best of all, this book is rich with the voices of students achieving success and confidence in expressing their ideas. James Collins enlarges our understanding of the composing processes of struggling students. Inservice and pre-service teachers and teacher educators need to read this book." --Louann Reid, PhD, Assistant Professor of English Education, Colorado State University, Fort Collins
Synopsis
Integrating the teaching of writing skills and writing processes, this book presents a collaborative approach to working with struggling writers in grades five through twelve, in both general and special education settings. Unlike purely process-oriented approaches, which hold that skills are acquired intuitively through writing and revising, strategic writing instruction sees the acquisition of key skills as integrally related to effective self-expression. Based on extensive research, the book describes how teachers and students can work together to develop writing strategies--thinking procedures for solving problems ranging from spelling a word correctly to planning a whole project. Illustrative case studies demonstrate how the co-construction and implementation of writing strategies can help students formulate and achieve their own personal writing goals. Integrating the teaching of writing skills and writing processes, this book presents a collaborative approach to working with struggling writers in grades five through twelve, in both general and special education settings. Unlike purely process-oriented approaches, which hold that skills are acquired intuitively through writing and revising, strategic writing instruction sees the acquisition of key skills as integrally related to effective self-expression. Based on extensive research, the book describes how teachers and students can work together to develop writing strategies--thinking procedures for solving problems ranging from spelling a word correctly to planning a whole project. Illustrative case studies demonstrate how the co-construction and implementation of writing strategies can help students formulate and achieve their own personal writing goals.
About the Author
James L. Collins, EdD, State University of New York at Buffalo
Table of Contents
Preface
1. Acquisition and Learning and Writing Instruction
2. Strategies and Performances
3. Teaching Writing Strategies
4. Writing Strategies Are Not Formulas (But Formulas Can Be Used Strategically)
5. Writing Development and Default Writing Strategies
6. Bringing Together Old and New Writing Strategies
7. Adapting Strategic Writing Instruction to Particular Contexts
8. Strategies, Identity, and Resistance