Characteristics of Genre
Writing in response to reading supports students’
comprehension and learning (Graham, Harris, &
Santangelo, 2015). Diane used interactive writing to
respond to the variety of genres the students were
reading. Early in the year, they wrote aesthetic re-
sponses to picture books. Later, they synthesized
content from informational texts and wrote main
ideas and summaries. They also composed realis-
tic fiction and fantasies, and Diane introduced story
grammar and sequencing of events. She explained,
“A story has a beginning, middle, and end, and good
writers tell what happened in each part.” She taught
characterization, setting, and problem/solution. She
showed students how “good writers use describing
words and action verbs so readers can paint a picture
in their minds.” These lessons provided students im-
portant knowledge about the characteristics of the
genre they were reading and writing, which support-
ed greater writing competence (Graham & Harris,
2016).
Monitoring Meaning
and Sustaining Composing
Creating a comprehensible text was of utmost im-
portance to being a good writer. Diane continually
asked students to reread the group text, explaining
that “good writers make sure it makes sense,” and
she showed them how to revise or edit “if it doesn’t.”
She explained that writers also revise to “add more
information” or “make the story more interesting.”
These kinds of comments helped students distin-
guish between revising macrostructural aspects and
editing surface features of the text.
Diane modeled several strategies writers em-
ploy to sustain their composing efforts. She asked
students to repeat the oral text several times
to hold it in short- term memory, and they often
counted the number of words to be written. She
demonstrated how rereading could remind writ-
ers of the next word to be written. As their oral
sentences grew in grammatical complexity, Diane
modeled writing in meaningful phrases. For ex-
ample, after a shared reading of
Mrs. Wishy-Washy
by Joy Cowley (1999), the group decided to write
“They got stuck in the mud, and Mrs. Wishy-Washy
pulled them out.” Diane said, “Let’s begin with the
first part, ‘They got stuck…in the mud.’” Later in
the year, when they were writing lengthy texts that
extended over several days, Diane demonstrated
how “good writers jot their ideas on a list” and then
refer to that list in each writing session “to remem-
ber what they’d planned to write.” Explicitly teach-
ing and providing guided practice in using sustain-
ing strategies can result in higher quality writing
(Helsel & Greenberg, 2007; Tracy, Reid, & Graham,
2009).
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