I taught an unusual creative writing class all year to grades 5,6,7and 8 all 
year that met one day a week. Because of that I focused on giving them "writing 
exercises" that were ungraded and meant to give them practice and be enjoyable. 
Unfortunately my complete syllabus and papers, etc.are at school, but I can 
list some favorites. These might work in a summer school environment better 
than multi-day units perhaps:
1. Music makes the story: free write to clips of various types of instrumental 
music. Using just short clips from Gladiator, Blade Runner, Robin Hood, 
Chocolate, etc., the kids came up with interesting sentences and most 
importantlygreat ideas that the music helped them visualize.
2. They al loved "percent poetry" , an idea from Sara Holbrook's book, 
Practical Poetry, where they write about things they like and assign these a 
number with the list equaling 100. I.e. I'm 10 percent funny, 5 percent 
sad..... etc.
3. Up, down and around. If you can, gather some cameras and go for a walk. Kids 
must take pictures at different eye levels than normal. This was always a HUGE 
hit. One kid got s pictue of s red lollipop that he later turned into s story 
about a spaceship (the lollipop) landing in giant land. Very creative, very 
funny.
4. Metaphor maker: This was a super huge hit aaa kids were blown away by the 
comparisons this generated. It really made them understand the power of 
metaphor. This idea came from a great book called, I think, the Poet's Pen. On 
a piece of paper, make these columns: color, abstract noun, concrete noun. Fill 
in the columns without thinking-just whatever comes to mind, although you might 
enourage them to think of the big crayola box descriptions for color. Randomly 
connect items in columns and write it a a metaphor: 
     Jealousy is a black car
     That drag races with love.   (second line should start with that or which)
     But never wins.  (third line starts with and or but)

The 6th through 8th graders nailed this;harder for the younger ones but sooo 
worth doing.

5. Word tickets. Susan Goldsmith Wooldbridge has a great book called Poemcrazy 
with a lot of activities using rolls of tickets. One that my kids really liked 
was to create new names for common objects and labels these things with the 
tickets. After all, who said that a desk was a desk? Maybe it could be a 
gazoot! The idea he is that tickets are a way in in to things.....
6. Found poetry: using sons on a theme (maybe summertime?) give kids the words, 
have them circle of copy strong nouns and verbs, then cut them out or recy them 
onto tickets, and rearrange these into new poems of their own.very fun, very 
messy, but again, worth it.

7. If you have access to computers and/or Smartboards, there area million mor 
of these things and some cool smart notebook lessons I made that I'll share 
when I get to a computer (on an iPad now with no flash drive support. Let me 
know If they would be helpful. Good luck!
Mary


Sent from my iPad

On Jul 2, 2010, at 12:33 PM, Nancy Carroll <[email protected]> wrote:

> 
> 
> Hi Everyone, 
> 
> 
> I'm teaching 2 summer camp/school classes:
> 1. Creative Writing- including poetry
> 2. Academic Writing
> for ages 10-13. The sessions are 2 weeks long, and classes are 90 minutes 
> each.
> 
> Any suggestions? Ideas? Mini-units? Readings to go along with it? Graphic 
> novels?
> 
> The camp's theme is mythology. 
> 
> Thank you, 
> 
> Nancy Carroll, MIT
> 
> If at first you don't succeed, then skydiving is not for you.
> 
> 
> 
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