A framed theater poster from a 1999 production of The Diary of Anne Frank fell from the wall in my classroom. Its glass shattered across the space in the empty room over the weekend.
I thought I was saving the signed poster as I cleaned the fragments from
the floor. Instead, I found a new resource for my classroom: the
frame.
Still intact, it brought me back to something I read in Kathryn Bomer's Hidden Gems: Naming and Teaching from the Brillance in Every Child's Writing:
If we have to literally put a frame around a piece of writing to get kids to see their work as art then that is what we must do.
My teaching of writing has shifted in recent years--I no longer write on
student writing. Using post-its and face-to-face conferring, I am
trying to elevate their perception of themselves in their own eyes.
This includes their writing...this especially includes their writing.
While I use a large bulletin in a main hallway to display student
writing, and while I hang a variety of pieces throughout the classroom, I
have not yet used a frame to isolate a piece of writing.
What an experiment thus far.
Placing the frame directly over a portion of the class white board, I
place a new piece of student writing inside each day. It has created a
buzz...whose piece will show up next? Students gather around the
bulletin boards and they scan the many one-pagers/book reviews posted
around the room, but the energy and smile the simple frame has generated
has been quite a happy accident.
The frame opened up another avenue for me--highlighting student quizzes
and tests. As this is a writing class, I teach vocabulary by asking
students to write. Our vocabulary assessments are not the multiple
choice/fill-in-the-blank garden variety that I used for many years.
Students now write fluid passages using any five words from our list of
twenty. They do not know what the topic will be--I've found that forces
the students to be ready for anything and therefore willing to study
all twenty words.
I stress context when I grading these quizzes--remember this is a
vocabulary assessment so take the time as a writer to demonstrate that
you understand the word. We practice this together as a large class and
in small groups. Over the course of the year, they are getting better
at writing with context and I believe they are truly learning some words
well--some words are truly becoming embedded in their written
vocabulary. I am seeing more of our vocabulary of study showing up in
more of their work.
I hadn't displayed exemplary pieces of these quizzes in class--I have
placed them on an overhead/Elmo/Promethean board and talked through what
makes it strong writing, but I hadn't displayed it. I hadn't set a frame around a test or a quiz.
By using the simple frame I see the evidence that more students are
seeing what they do as a piece of art...which is just another way of
saying important...valued...special.
Or elevating them in their own eyes.
