Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 60
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-4758-1404-0 • Paperback • December 2014 • $25.00 • (£18.99)
978-1-4758-1405-7 • eBook • December 2014 • $23.50 • (£17.99)
Billie F. Birnie, PhD, has been teaching writing most of her life, first to students in elementary, middle, and senior high schools, and in recent years, to prospective and experienced teachers. Her published writing ranges from poetry and memoir to professional articles and books on teaching and learning.
Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Preliminaries
The Writing Process
What Students Must Know about Sentences
What Students Must Know about Paragraphs
What Students Must Know about Essays
How Modeling Works
The Use of Response Groups
How To Use the Rest of This Book
The Strategies
Chronological Order
Spatial Organization
Topical Organization
Comparison
Contrast
Comparison-Contrast
Question-Answer
Traditional Narrative
Point-Counterpoint
Extended Analogy
Teaching the Organizational Strategies (Table)
A Lesson in Modeling Rhythm and Rhyme in Poetry
References
Dr. Billie Birnie incorporates the natural way we learn into her carefully structured steps for teaching writing. I can’t think of any other book which actually teaches organizational strategies. As teachers, we all know the terms: chronological, spatial, topical, comparison, comparison-contrast—but wait! There are more: question-answer, traditional narrative, point-counterpoint, and, amazingly, my favorite—extended analogy. Point-counterpoint? A strategy for organizing an essay? Brilliant! In fact, this entire guidebook is not only brilliant; it gives teachers precise guidelines for teaching multiple kinds of essays. I commend Dr. Birnie for providing this balanced approach to teaching these organizational strategies for writing.
We are all used to texts that promote one theory or another but never give us the bedrock. That’s what Dr. Birnie does in this guidebook: gives teachers of all grade levels (designated in the text) models for developing interesting, provocative, well-structured essays.
What I especially value in Dr. Birnie’s approach is that she does not limit young writers. She does not proclaim that the five-paragraph essay is essential. What she does do is allow for that model, if it is appropriate, along with many others. There is room for the innovative, creative student as well as for the student who needs the secure structure that is always provided. In fact, this guidebook provides a complete lesson plan which utilizes the strategies in the book to teach modeling rhythm and rhyme; this one lesson can be adapted to any age level.
I hope that this guidebook will be widely used in teacher training as well as in workshops at every level, from department to district to writing projects nationwide. I commend Dr. Birnie for providing this balanced approach to teaching these organizational strategies for writing.
— Fran Claggett, Sonoma State University’s Osher Lifellong Learning Institute, author of Teaching Writing: Craft, Art, Genre; coauthor of the Daybooks of Critical Reading and Writing
Billie Birnie’s Guide to Organizational Strategies for Thinking and Writing helps students to understand the different ways in which good writing is organized. Students often learn by emulating, and the mentor texts found in this book provide students with rich practice. A great addition to any writing teacher’s toolbox.
— Kelly Gallagher, teacher of English at Magnolia High School in Anaheim, California, and author of Write Like This: Teaching Real-World Writing Through Modeling and Mentor Texts
What a gem! Written with clarity, precision and perceptiveness, A Teacher’sGuide to Organizational Strategies for Thinking and Writing presents ten exquisitely crafted teaching strategies for teaching writing, set in a framework for understanding how clear thinking and skillful writing are developed and nurtured!
In her guide, Dr. Billie Birniereveals the power of structure and models for helping students become mature writers and thinkers. At the same time, her guidance artfully balances direct instruction with reminders to teachers to honor student preferences and individual needs so that one never forgets who “owns the writing.”
A Teacher’s Guide to Organizational Strategies for Thinking and Writing is a must-have book for anyone serious about teaching thinking and writing while honing the craft of teaching.
— Stephanie King, 2000 Florida Teacher of the Year
Dr. Billie Birnie’s book is the perfect blend of theory and practice for elementary, middle, high school, and adult education teachers. Divided into three sections, the book provides an outline of the fundamentals of writing; followed by a list of critical steps to follow for writing success; and organizational strategies to writing.
The third section describes how to write in ten different ways, and highly engaging passages are included as examples for writers at each educational level. In addition to the narrative descriptions, Dr. Birnie compiles the organizational strategies into a chart for easy reference.
This book makes the teaching of writing approachable with outstanding models to follow. Her book as a smorgasboard of ideas for teachers to use to motivate and empower student writers.
I highly recommend this book!
— Jeanne Qvarnstrom, EdD, assistant professor of Education, Sul Ross State University, Alpine, Texas