I have for a long time
argued that every lesson ought to have three elements – firstly, an
‘opener’ which sets its objectives in the pupils’ own experience,
secondly, some kind of pupil-activity (an investigation or discussion) and
finally, some form of written/ exercise work. The ‘written work’ is often
inadequately-considered, and this article is about how to make your
‘written/ exercise’ tasks as interesting and profitable as possible. We
teach a beleaguered subject, and it is vital that teachers ‘ring the
changes’ from lesson to lesson. Serving up an endless diet of copying,
cloze exercises and ‘questions’ is a recipe for disaster, not only at
‘options’ time, but for the pupils’ academic success.
The
Objective of Written Work
The first question History
teachers have to ask themselves is: ‘Is it necessary to set any written
work at all’. Less able pupils find written expression difficult – less
able boys, particularly so – and this can lead to bad behaviour as
they get bored, or fail to see the point in doing work in which they can
only fail, or try to disguise/ compensate for the fact that they cannot do
it.
The ultimate
question is WHY are you setting the work – what is the OBJECTIVE of this
particular element of the lesson? Here are some possibilities:
a.
Record
Is the
objective of the written work simply to record the facts and ideas learned
during the lesson? Less able pupils often have such poor handwriting that
they cannot revise from their written notes even if they finish them. If
the only objective of the ‘written work’ is to record the lesson material,
would it not be better to give them a typed, duplicated revision sheet,
talk them through it, and get them to learn it for next lesson?
b.
Reinforcement
Is the
objective of the written work to reinforce/ internalise the facts or
skills studied during the lesson? If so, a written exercise is ONE valid
method – provided it is properly directed towards doing so. The
teacher should evaluate the writing task to check that it is reinforcing
the skill learned. It is almost certain that a cloze exercise will be
inadequate to this task; indeed, it may be unnecessary to set any written
work at all – for reinforcement of simple facts, for instance, might a
test, or quiz, or even old-fashioned class chanting be more effective?
c.
Writing skills
If the
objective of the written element of the lesson is to teach the pupils
certain writing skills, either historical (for instance, writing a
causation essay) or transferable (such as writing in the past tense), then
the teacher should properly set a written exercise. Again, a cloze
exercise or questions will be inadequate to this task; the exercise ought
to be devised specifically to meet a skill identified in the lesson
plan. The teacher should try to devise an interesting written
exercise.
d. To
keep the pupils quiet
This is not as
cynical as it seems. Less able pupils, particularly, often show little
interest in discussion or listening to the teacher. And no matter how
exciting the lesson, after a time of activity/ discussion, their attention
begins to flag, and they become harder to control/ keep on task. It is
absolutely valid, at this point in the lesson, to set them a productive
written task. But, again – if this is the only reason they are writing –
should you not make the task interesting?
Thus it is that, in many
cases teachers can properly decide not to set any written work AT ALL, but
can devise a different activity which will better accomplish the planned
objective of this section of the lesson. And in those situations where
some form of written work is essential, teachers will usually want to set
written exercises which are more appropriate, better directed and more
interesting than cloze exercises or questions.
Alternatives to written work
Below, please find ideas
for ‘written work’ which involve little or no writing.
The idea you
use will depend on the class, the lesson plan and, most of all, on the
particular objective behind the ‘written work’ (e.g. to learn certain
facts). Don’t forget to ‘ring the changes’ from lesson to lesson’ – even
the most exciting activity done lesson after lesson will eventually bore
the pupils.
1. Quizzes/
Games
Most classes love a quiz, even if all you do is divide the class into
‘Girls’ and ‘Boys’ and ask each team questions in turn. A quiz can help
pupils learn facts, and familiarise them with information and ideas. But
why not try to vary the kind of quiz?
Why not try:
a. Different
teams – tie into school rivalries by dividing them into girls v. boys,
or tutor groups.
b. Different
names – give the teams fun names such as ‘Gloria’s Gladiators’ and
‘Terry’s Twits’, but remember to act professionally and sensitively.
c. Different
rounds – you can:
• introduce
‘University Challenge’-type ‘starter for ten’ rounds.
• introduce
‘spotlight’ rounds, where one individual, chosen at random, has to answer
a number of questions.
• let one team ask
another team a question; award points not only for the answer, but for the
quality of the question.
• let teams identify
which group – even which individual – they want to answer the/their
question.
• give a series of
clues, of decreasing difficulty, awarding 3 points if the team gets the
answer at the first clue, but only 2 or 1 points if they have to ask for a
second or third clue.
• use the textbook to
introduce ‘picture questions’ or ‘see & remember’ rounds.
• introduce a
‘Jeopardy’ round, where you give the answer, and the team has to tell you
the question.
• introduce special
‘forfeit’ rounds, where, if the pupil gets the answer wrong, s/he has to
do a forfeit (for instance, reciting ‘Humpty Dumpty’ in front of the
class, or going out to the playground and shouting ‘I love History’ as
loudly as possible). BE CAREFUL, in this round, to select your pupils and
your forfeits wisely and professionally.
All the above require no
preparation, just a quick mind in the lesson. With a little preparation,
however, you could introduce:
d. Video clips
– to have ‘see and remember’ or ‘what comes next’ rounds.
e. Flashcards
– to be used with special needs pupils. Ask pupils to read the word, or
show it to the class, then hide it and ask them to spell it.
f. ‘They Think
It’s All Over’ – a round where one member of the team works through a
series of cards, on which are written names/ facts/ dates etc. Without
mentioning the word itself, the pupil gives clues to the team, who try to
guess the word on the card.
g. Card Sort
Games can be very exciting. Devise an assorted series of (say, 20)
cards related to a certain topic – for example, Carole Brown produced an
excellent set of cards on Medicine in her Medicine Through Time
Activity File
1.
Then you can ask the pupils to select/ arrange them into different sets in
different ways – by date, all those relating to Public Health, an example
of progression etc. The first team to finish, or the team with the best
selection, wins the points.
Teachers should watch
television quizzes, to steal ideas to use in class (there are innumerable
game shows on satellite TV). Some which have provided ideas for
quizzes/games include:
h.
‘Fifteen-to-One’ – the pupils stand on their chairs as long as they
answer correctly any question addressed to them. As however, they get
questions wrong, they first have to get down to stand by their
chairs, and then to sit down (i.e. to go out of the quiz). The last pupil
standing is the winner.
i. ‘Wheel of
Fortune’ – a ‘Hangman’-type game, where pupils/ teams earn the right
to choose a letter only if they answer a question correctly.
j. ‘Family
Fortunes’ – contestants think of [six] things to do with a certain
subject (for instance, ‘The Armada’). You have already done this with
another class, to get a list of words, and the numbers of those who
thought of it (e.g. Drake – 15; ships – 10; storm – 4, etc.). The
contestants score for their suggestions as many points as people who
thought of it in the other class).
k. ‘Give us a
Clue’, ‘Call my Bluff’ and ‘Just a Minute’ are excellent games to play
with more able (and, especially, extrovert) pupils. ‘TFI Friday’ carried
an item called the ‘One-minute blitz’, where contestants ranted about a
topic for a minute (reduce to 30 seconds for younger pupils), and then a
vote was taken on the best.
l.
‘Blockbusters’, although it needs a lot of preparation, is a popular
game.
Other game/ quiz ideas
include:
m. ‘I went to
market’ – if the pupils have learned a LIST of facts during the lesson
(e.g., all the things one would find in a medieval street), an adapted
game of ‘I went to market’ can be an effective way of reinforcing the
facts. The first pupil says: ‘I went to a medieval street and I bought [a
pie]’; the second has to say: ‘I went to a medieval street and I bought [a
pie and some rushes],’ and so on, until the last pupil has some 30 things
to remember.
n. ‘Cinemas’
– adapt the popular children’s party game, by offering four alternative
answers. Pupils choose the answer they think is correct by going to an
appropriate corner of the room. When they find out which ‘corner’ was the
correct answer, those pupils who chose wrongly sit down. The game
continues until only one pupil remains standing – the winner. Award a
prize; and watch out for cheats sneaking back into the game!
o. ‘Letters’
– devise a quiz where all the answers are single words which use a common
stock of (say 15) letters. Split the class into two teams and give each
member of each team one of the letters written on a small piece of card.
When you ask the question, not only must the team find the answer, but
they have to re-arrange themselves in a line to ‘spell’ (and hold up) the
word, using the letters on the cards.
p. A ‘Ladder’
– push the desks together to make a single line/ ‘snake’ of pupils. Ask
each pupil a question in turn, from the first to the last. If a pupil
answers incorrectly, ask the question of the next pupil in the line, and
so on until a pupil gets it right. That pupil then jumps up the ladder to
the place of the pupil who first answered the question wrongly; all those
who got it wrong then move one place down the ladder. At the end of every
round, all the pupils politely applaud the first in the ladder, and taunt
the last: ‘[Name] YOU ARE BOTTOM’.
q. Class Chants
– where the content of the lesson was a list/ table of facts (e.g. of
dates and events), write them on the board. The pupils read the list out
loud a few times. Rub out one piece of information. The class reads out
loud the list, remembering the missing item. Rub out another item, and so
on. Sometimes the whole class rehearses the list, sometimes individuals.
Continue until the entire list is rubbed off the board, but the pupils are
still able to remember it.
r. Board games
can reinforce factual information and historical ‘colour’ – especially if
the subject matter involves a journey (e.g. a pilgrimage) or a
competition/ conflict (e.g. competing firms in the Industrial Revolution).
But they take a long time to devise, involve a lot of fiddly resources
(dice, counters etc.), and can allow a badly-behaved class to create
havoc!
2. Drama/
Role Play
Why not finish the lesson
by letting the pupils act out its message? Most classes love drama
work, and many historical subjects lend themselves to it (e.g. the scene
in a graphic description of the Irish Famine). Some historical subjects
(e.g. the sequence of events in a battle) need dramatic role play for the
pupils to understand them fully. Drama develops self-presentation and
self-awareness, which helps pupils’ academic presentation as well as their
social skills.
Where more
able pupils can learn by the hearing of the ear only, teachers of less
able pupils need to address all the senses to secure understanding.
Movement about the classroom reinforces understanding both of structures
(e.g. represent the Feudal System by making ‘the king’ stand on a table, a
few ‘barons’ sit on it, some ‘knights’ sit on chairs, and the majority –
the ‘villeins’ – sit on the floor) and of sequence (e.g. explain religious
changes in Tudor England by having the class move from one side of the
room to the other as different monarchs come to the throne).
Key ideas include2:
a. Tell-a-story
– the class sit in a circle. Speaking one after the other, they tell a
story. Each pupil can say as little or as much as they wish (some will
simply say ‘and’), but the story must make sense, and it has to start with
the first pupil and finish with the last – it is a class production. Tell
the pupils that, if someone misses out something, it may be necessary for
someone to say ‘but before that . . .’.
b.
Group-Prepared Scenes – the teacher divides the class into groups to
portray an event or situation, either with a teacher-prepared script, or
extemporising (e.g. a group of Germans discussing what they think about
the Treaty of Versailles).
c. Freeze-frame
– working in groups, pupils take up a pose to represent an event (e.g. the
death of Becket). The rest of the class guess/ comment. This is especially
useful, because the teacher can ask the actors what they are thinking/
feeling, and the exercise can thus be used to reinforce standpointing/
empathy skills.
d. Argument
– two pupils in role (e.g. a Cavalier and a Roundhead) get together and
argue about events and principles.
e. Advisers
– divide the pupils into teams and give them descriptions of historical
situations facing a government/ individual. The groups discuss the
situation and decide what advice they are going to give. This can be
turned into a game if the teacher ‘scores’ the advise, giving, of course,
the highest marks to those teams which got nearest to what actually
happened.
f. Royal
Commission – if the pupils have been investigating an historical
problem, the teacher can give them roles, and then ask them questions as
though they were giving evidence (this is especially easy if, for
instance, a class has been using Royal Commission reports to investigate
factory conditions).
g. Courtroom
Drama – this idea is used to investigate Medieval Public Health in my
Options in History series
3.
The lesson is set up as a courtroom, and pupils play the roles of opposing
lawyers and witnesses; a ‘jury’ delivers its verdict – were medieval towns
dirty or not? It takes a lot of preparation, but it is a useful way of
introducing the pros and cons of an historical debate to pupils.
h. Debate –
this also allows a class to consider an historical debate. Give the two
proposers homework time to prepare a case. In the lesson, give all the
pupils specific roles (e.g. a sailor, a slave trader), and hold a class
debate (e.g. ‘Should the Slave Trade be abolished?’). Pupils (in role)
contribute to the debate. At the end, pupils shed their role, and choose
which side had the best of the argument.
An
alternative form is the balloon debate; contestants try to persuade the
class they shouldn’t be thrown from the balloon; only the winner survives.
Again, TV can provide
teachers with different ideas – notably the TV show ‘Whose Line is it
Anyway?’ uses many different drama games. I often ask pupils to do things
‘in the style of . . .’, and another useful game adaptable to the History
classroom is the one where people arrive at ‘a party’ as different
characters, whom the ‘host’ has to guess.
3. Easy
Exercises
Although they involve
little or no writing, the following tasks require the pupils to think
about what they are doing:
a. ‘Colouring
in’ sounds an academically unacceptable task. In fact, if pupils are
encouraged to make comments as they work, a colouring exercise can often
raise interesting questions. Even with older pupils, where the home
background does not encourage productive conversation, a colouring task
can lead to conversation which teaches them how to discuss and argue.
b. Drawing
is a very gentle, pleasant way to record certain kinds of information,
especially symbols and possessions. The work can be extended by asking the
pupils to write labels and captions to explain their drawings. When you
are studying topics such as ‘The Knight’, it is easy to buy ‘cut-out’
pictures that the pupils colour, then make into a model.
c. Posters/
banners/ adverts (e.g., a banner protesting a grievance in the
Peasants’ Revolt/ a poster persuading people to oppose the slave trade).
d. Maps can
be useful, especially if the pupils write labels and captions.
e. Tally charts
– though pupils find it boring to spend a long time recording, certain
kinds of sources (population censi, for instance) lend themselves to tally
work, which later provides the basis for discussion/ hypothesis.
f. Graphs
are not just for population, industrial output and numerical information,
but can be used to show changing fortunes, for example, of an individual’s
life or a war. But beware – less able pupils find graphs VERY hard to do.
g. Time-charts/
timelines/ timetables are useful for recording certain types of
sequential information (e.g. the main events in a war). Again, less able
pupils can find this difficult, so you might want to supply a template
grid, or do away with the axis and let the pupils present the information
as a flow-diagram.
h. Spidergrams
require a lot of thought, but almost no writing.
i. Tick boxes
– where pupils are examining an historical debate, provide them with a
worksheet which presents them with a series of propositions, which they
are required merely to tick ‘yes’ or ‘no’. Their replies point them
towards a conclusion, which they can either try to write down, or give
verbally.
j. Headlines
– in the TV programme ‘The Sundays’ the panel members suggest/ justify
under a series of categories (Domestic, Foreign, Sports, ‘Rag Bag’ etc.)
possible lead stories for an imaginary newspaper. The audience comments,
then votes on the best suggestion, to create a ‘front page’ of main
headlines. This idea suits an end-of-topic lesson summarising/ providing
an overview (e.g. The First World War – pupils, having been given time to
prepare their ideas, suggest stories for a 1918 newspaper under the
categories ‘biggest battle’, ‘saddest story’, ‘most horrific fact’ etc.).
Reward the pupils whose suggestions are voted best.
Where the topic is a story over time, this idea can be adapted by asking
pupils to suggest headlines for different days/ dates; more able pupils
can then do a written homework task to write the newspaper ‘articles’ (see
below).
Writing
Exercises
Alarmingly, in the
classroom, History written work too often comprises copying, cloze
exercises or ‘questions’. Although these may have their place in lessons,
they are very limited in their usefulness.
a.
Copying
b.
Dictation
c.
Cloze exercises
These should be used only:
• to establish the
principle, from time to time, that, sometimes, academic work involves
routine, extended work.
• when you want the
class to work quietly while you get on with another task (e.g., diagnostic
marking with individual pupils).
• when you are trying
to ‘crack the whip’ with a class which is a bit naughty.
• when you are absent
from the classroom and have to leave routine work for a cover/ supply
teacher.
• with dyslexic or
dyspraxic pupils, with whom you are trying to establish basics such as
letter-to-letter correspondence, visual/copying accuracy or
form-of-grapheme, handwriting and presentational skills.
Otherwise, with all but
Special needs classes, teachers ought to regard copying and cloze
exercises as a failure; there are alternative written tasks which are much
more profitable for pupils.
d.
Questions
• ‘describe’ questions
simply require finding a factual answer from a text. This form of written
exercise is little better than a cloze exercise.
You can make such
‘questions’ more demanding by giving the pupils the answers, and asking
them to think of the question (you will be surprised how hard they find
this); or by asking the pupils to devise questions on a topic, which they
then give to their friend to answer.
• ‘explain’ questions
ask the pupils to explain an idea or opinion. These should be introduced
within a structured, planned approach to extended writing (see below).
History is a literary subject. Written sources are of necessity its chief
resource, and it is essential that pupils learn to express their opinions
in writing. But let’s try to make the written part of the lesson more
useful and more fun!
1. Simple
Written Exercises
Some of the following
ideas are so easy that they are barely harder than copying, but they all
require the pupils to think about what they are doing:
a. Heads and
tails – write a set of sentences, but split them in half. Pupils copy
out the sentences, matching ‘heads’ to ‘tails’. To make it easier still,
join the two parts of each sentence with ‘bits of string’, so that pupils
can check their decisions.
b. Sequences
– write a set of points, which the pupils have to sort out when they copy
them – perhaps by order of date, or into order of importance, or into
‘points for and against’, or ‘facts’ and ‘opinions’ etc. With the least
able pupils, let them cut up the worksheet and stick the points into their
exercise books in the required order.
c. Multiple
choice questions provide the least able pupils with a chance of
success. For more able pupils, these can be adapted into the kind of
magazine games so popular with pupils. The game addresses a topic like:
‘Are you a good Roman soldier?’ then gives a series of relevant questions,
each with three possible answers; the pupils choose one, which gets a
score, depending on how historically valid it is.
d. Think
Bubbles – where pupils are studying motivation or empathy, a valid
exercise is to give them photocopies of famous pictures with added ‘think
bubbles’, asking them to write what each person in the picture was
thinking.
e. Tables and
lists of facts/ words/ points/ dates/ events – many topics lend
themselves to recording information in table or list form (e.g. what
soldiers would see on the Western Front + sources of information).
Teachers can help less able pupils by providing a list of ideas from which
pupils select answers (e.g. the feelings of Thomas à Becket), or by
part-completing a table with certain items of information.
2. Word
Games
All teachers ought to buy
children’s quiz books/ activity books to get interesting ideas for
exercises. Examples of exercises that the pupils enjoy include:
a. Wordsearches
– there is little point in the simple wordsearch which lists words for
pupils merely to find (except for dyslexic pupils where you are trying to
do some letter-level reinforcement), but wordsearches have greater
academic validity if you:
• don’t give the
pupils the words, but give them clues (thus the wordsearch becomes like a
set of simple questions – but much more fun).
• let the pupils find
the words without providing any clues, then get them to invent
questions which will guide others to the words.
• provide a list of
words and a blank grid; let the pupils create a wordsearch, inventing
their own clues, for a friend to do.
b.
Acrostics are a variation of wordsearches. You will find a number
of different kinds of acrostic in children’s quiz-books, but the basic
forms are:
• by answering clues,
pupils find a number of words going ‘across’ to reveal a solution-word
going ‘down’.
• pupils answer clues.
Each letter of the answers is given a number, so they can, by matching
letters to numbers, gradually find the solution to a mystery sentence or
word.
c. Crosswords
– although these are difficult to devise for yourself. A simpler idea is
to provide the clues, and give pupils words with missing letters to help
them find the answer (e.g. ‘A building to defend you’:
C_S__E).
d. Anagrams
– but be careful; these can confuse less able pupils, and pupils who
cannot spell get very frustrated.
3. Language
Exercises
History is a literary
subject, and History teachers ought to play their part in teaching pupils
how to write correctly; many schools already have a ‘language across the
curriculum’ strategy. So, although you set an exercise which addresses the
subject ‘The reign of Queen Mary’, you are also developing an age-relevant
grammatical skill. You will need to assess your pupils’ writing abilities,
and to set tasks which progress appropriate skills.
Note that the
skills listed below are developing skills, which will need revisiting at
deeper levels throughout Key Stage 3. Find out what exercises are being
used by the English department. Rewrite/ adapt these to fit in with the
appropriate part of your syllabus, so your written History exercises
reinforce grammar work being done in English. It would be wise to invite
an English teacher into the department to explain how and when the skills
listed below are taught in your school. There is no need to try to think
up interesting grammar exercises – there are some excellent ‘Specials’
produced by Folens which will give you ideas you can adapt.
Skills which you should be
able to teach through History might include:
a.
comprehension – basic understanding of words, phrases, ideas etc. in
context – but avoid long boring lists of direct questions; spice up the
exercises with different kinds of tasks.
b. Punctuation
– the correct use of:
• capitals (at the
start of a sentence; for the first letter of a quote; for names, titles
and ranks; in poetry.
• full stops (at the
end of a sentence; in abbreviations; to indicate omissions).
• commas (to separate
clauses; between adjectives; in large numbers) and, for older pupils,
where it would be better to use semi-colons and parentheses.
• question marks and
exclamation marks.
• quotation marks (to
indicate direct speech; for sarcasm).
• apostrophes (the
possessive apostrophe; to indicate missing letters in a word such as
it’s).
• hyphens (to connect
linked words such as well-known when used adjectivally; to qualify common
adjectives with a suffix such as re-; in lists of words such as ‘one-,
two- and threefold’; and to split a word at the end of a line).
c. spelling
rules (for instance: ‘i before e except after c’/ drop the ‘e, add
‘i-n-g’/ ‘y’ becomes ‘i’ in words such as ‘tries’ etc.), and the spelling
(and meaning) of subject-specific words (such as rebellion, soldiers,
biased, etc.).
d. construction
of plurals – y–ies; is–es; s–ses (except for French words such as
corps); ix–ices; us–i; a–ae; um–a; on–a; o–i; eau–eaux; specific instances
such as spoonsful and menservants.
e. grammatical
forms – for instance, appropriate use of:
• collective nouns
(government, clergy, family, public, bourgeoisie, Cabinet) followed by a
singular verb.
• comparative and
superlative.
• qualifying
adjectives such as ‘some’, ‘many’ etc.
• time-words such as
‘first’, ‘after’, ‘then’ etc.
• link words such as
‘although’, ‘while’ etc.
• Should have,
could have, would have (not ‘. . . of’).
• ‘he’ or ‘him’, ‘she’
or ‘her’, ‘they’ or ‘them’/ ‘may’ or ‘might’/ ‘shall’ or ‘will’?
• relevant Latin
abbreviations such as ditto, ibid, sic, etc.,
etc.
• bibliographies,
references and provenances.
f. using
correctly words which are often confused – e.g. off/of; too/to;
there/their; affect/effect; infer/imply; opinion/prejudice;
Scots/Scottish/Scotch.
g. word-order
exercises – muddled sentences, including punctuation.
h. change of
form – e.g. from present to past tense, from active to passive etc.
i. précis
– asking the pupils to condense a passage into 10, 25 or 100 words (or,
successively, 10, 25 AND 100 words).
j.
paraphrasing and note-taking – both these are skills which,
again, you will have to match to your pupils’ abilities and developing
skills. Liaise with the English department. Start with short, simple
passages in Year Seven, and introduce more difficult passages as they grow
older. Ultimately, pupils have to learn how to take their own notes.
4. Extended
Writing
It is unrealistic to
expect pupils to write essays without teaching them how. History teachers
must develop a planned strategy which encourages and coaches pupils
towards this. (Teachers should to read Christine Counsell’s excellent HA
pamphlet on Analytical and Discursive Writing.
4)
a.
Structured Sentences
The first step
with Year Seven pupils will be to supply them with a basic sentence
structure, into which they drop ideas and points. Thus, in a lesson which
has studied different opinions about Harold Godwinson, you will provide
the structure: ‘N. said Harold was . . . . . because . . . . . ;
O. said Harold was . . . . . because . . . . . ; P said . .
.’ etc.
5
b.
Writing in paragraphs
As less able
pupils often find it hard to sustain a narrative through a series of
points, they will initially need help with this.
You can write
a story/ essay as a class project:
• either each
pupil/ group of pupils takes a point each and writes about it so that,
when the points are read in the correct sequence, the class as a whole has
built up an extended narrative.
• or write the
paragraphs one at a time, discussing each in turn with the pupils, and
then getting them to add it to their growing narrative.
• supply lists of key
words/ ideas to be included in each paragraph.
c.
Narrative Structure
As pupils grow
older, the level of support needed will reduce, but you can continue to
tell pupils what each paragraph will deal with. One way to develop this
with younger/ less able pupils is to link the narrative to a sequence of
pictures (for example, a sequence showing First World War soldiers joining
up and doing their initial training). When the pupils are writing essays,
they can write about each picture in turn, which provides the ongoing
storyline to their narrative.
d.
Different kinds of written output
Extended
writing does not need always to be in essay form.
• Ask more able pupils
to write from different points of view, or to be overtly biased – thus one
pupil writes about the Armada from the Spanish point of view, while a
friend writes from the English point of view.
• or ask the pupils to
write for different media, for instance:
a children’s story.
an entry for an
encyclopaedia.
a newspaper report.
a radio script.
a TV news report.
a series of letters.
a diary.
remembering back.
‘official’ reports.
‘job descriptions’.
a poem.