What exactly does persuasive writing look like in 2nd Grade? Mrs. Forse decided to jump into persuasive writing with her 2nd grade advanced readers this past week after spending some time studying the new Common Core State Standards for Writing. She had the kids begin by writing book reviews to convince others to read their favorite books.
First, Mrs. Forse created an anchor chart about the pieces of a good book review:
- a brief summary that doesn't give away the ending
- the reviewer's favorite part
- who they would recommend should read the book
It was my privilege to model what this might look like. I used the book Punt, Pass and Point, by Bonnie-Alise Leggat. I love this book because it was written and illustrated by a third grader, which is a big selling point for kids.
After we modeled the book review to the left, kids were asked to select a favorite book of theirs to write a book review on. The initial reviews were good, but showed some confusions and missing pieces. Mrs. Forse took this information and did what great teachers do, she gave them another model. This time she used the book Goodnight Goon, by Michael Rex, a parody of Goodnight Moon. The kids loved the humor in this book.
Mrs. Forse reading Goodnight Goon. |
Then Mrs. Forse had the kids use their original anchor chart, turned rubric, to build a review for Goodnight Goon. They spent quite a bit of the discussion figuring out how to summarize the book, but making sure to leave out the ending so that they didn't spoil it.
Looking at the rubric and building the book review. Click here to see a larger version of the SmartBoard Anchor Chart.
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Some of the early drafts were very impressive when you consider they were being written by 7 and 8 year olds. Stay tuned. I hope to add a few examples here soon.
Enjoy the sunshine this weekend!
Angie