• Image 01
  • Image 02
  • Image 03
  • Image 04
  • Image 05
  • Image 06
Need assistance? Contact Us: 1-800-255-5897

Menu

  • Home
  • About Us
    • Company Overview
    • Management Team
    • Board of Directors
  • Your Loan Service Center
  • MAKE A PAYMENT
  • Business Service Center
  • Contact Us
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Company Overview
    • Management Team
    • Board of Directors
  • Your Loan Service Center
  • MAKE A PAYMENT
  • Business Service Center
  • Contact Us
Recent Quotes
View Full List
My Watchlist
Create Watchlist
Indicators
DJI
Nasdaq Composite
SPX
Gold
Crude Oil
Markets
Stocks
ETFs
Tools
Markets:
Overview
News
Currencies
International
Treasuries

Tips to Help Students Be Better Writers

By: StatePoint Media
July 11, 2024 at 01:00 AM EDT
ⓘ This article is third-party content and does not represent the views of this site. We make no guarantees regarding its accuracy or completeness.

photo

SPONSORED CONTENT -- (StatePoint) No matter the career path students pursue, writing and communication skills are essential to success. Whether a student identifies as a “math kid,” a “sports kid,” or even a “reading kid,” writing doesn’t always come naturally.

Parents and teachers need to be creative in how they present writing, so students feel personally motivated to develop their skills.

“Almost any student is capable of becoming a strong, passionate writer,” says Rowana Miller, founder and Executive Director of creative writing education nonprofit Cosmic Writers. “The trick is in connecting writing to the activities, subjects and ideas that already excite them.”

Here are some tips from Miller to motivate kids to strengthen writing skills:

Present Writing as Fun

Especially for students between the ages of 8-12, who have developed basic writing skills but may not have a defined sense of what it means to be a “writer,” it is essential to create positive associations with the act of writing.

To accomplish this, you can teach writing through gamified, collaborative and imaginative activities. For example, you can guide kids through the process of writing a series of “telephone stories.” With students sitting in a circle, have each one write an opening sentence on a piece of paper, and then pass the paper to the student to their right. Each student should continue the story by adding a sentence to the page, and then pass the paper a second time. This process repeats until each student has their original paper again.

Provide Engaging Materials

When kids’ writing practice only comes from dry textbooks, it is difficult to create positive associations with writing. Experts recommend using materials that are just as fun as the activities good teachers use when teaching.

For example, the 8-12 age range is well-served by such exciting activity books as “The Monster-Building Handbook,” a new publication from Cosmic Writers. “The Monster-Building Handbook” combines a narrative premise with a call-to-action for students to practice writing: fictional monster-maker Angelica Fearborne needs them to develop an original monster character who can face off against her monster-hunter twin brother. Learn more at www.cosmicwriters.org.

Link Writing to Favorite Shows & Video Games

Students don’t usually recognize the connection between writing and the media they love. Writing becomes more exciting when they learn that writing is an essential part of a funny YouTube series or thrilling video game.

Students are particularly compelled by opportunities to write in the style of the media they enjoy. For example, if you are working with kids who like to play Dungeons and Dragons, it is a natural next step to practice fantasy storytelling and writing.

For almost any student, it is possible to find a connection between writing and something they already like. A “math kid” may engage most with genres that emphasize logic and problem-solving, like mystery-writing. A “sports kid” may be excited to write articles about the school baseball team. And when these students practice these kinds of writing, they may discover they have been “writing kids” all along.

*****

Photo Credit: (c) monkeybusinessimages / iStock via Getty Images Plus

Report this content

If you believe this article contains misleading, harmful, or spam content, please let us know.

Report this article

More News

View More
News headline image
MDA Space Targets US Defense Market With $620M Acquisition ↗
Today 14:20 EDT
Via MarketBeat
Topics Initial Public Offering
Tickers LUNR MDA RDW RTX
News headline image
Carnival's Second Quarter: Is the Stock Still Complicated? ↗
Today 13:35 EDT
Via MarketBeat
Tickers CCL CUK NCLH RCL
News headline image
Domino's Stock Slides to 52-Week Low as Investors Digest CEO Change ↗
Today 12:55 EDT
Via MarketBeat
Topics Retirement
Tickers DPZ YUM
News headline image
Microsoft Solves AI’s Biggest Bottleneck With Chevron Deal ↗
Today 12:20 EDT
Via MarketBeat
Topics Artificial Intelligence Energy
Tickers AMZN CAT CVX GEV META MSFT
News headline image
Getty Images’ OpenAI Deal Gives the Stock a New AI Licensing Story ↗
Today 11:45 EDT
Via MarketBeat
Topics Artificial Intelligence Intellectual Property
Tickers GETY SSTK

Recent Quotes

View More
Symbol Price Change (%)
AMZN  227.01
-7.26 (-3.10%)
AAPL  275.15
-17.93 (-6.12%)
AMD  532.57
+12.83 (2.47%)
BAC  58.19
+0.46 (0.80%)
GOOG  342.19
-2.85 (-0.83%)
META  542.87
-14.80 (-2.65%)
MSFT  352.83
-12.63 (-3.46%)
NVDA  195.74
-3.26 (-1.64%)
ORCL  152.46
-5.07 (-3.22%)
TSLA  375.12
-0.41 (-0.11%)
Stock Quote API & Stock News API supplied by www.cloudquote.io
Quotes delayed at least 20 minutes.
By accessing this page, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms Of Service.
© 2025 FinancialContent. All rights reserved.

Having difficulty making your payments? We're here to help! Call 1-800-255-5897

Copyright © 2019 Franklin Credit Management Corporation
All Rights Reserved
Contact Us | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Sitemap