When I present to teachers I am
often asked, “How often should I have my
students engage in Critical Writing?”
The short answer is... Every
period. Every day.
The long answer is slightly more
nuanced. In the typical classroom,
critical writing occurs around 4% of the time.
That is not a typo and that includes reading and writing classrooms. And
4% is not a LYS finding. Mike Schmoker (one of the REALLY big brains in
education) was the first to point this out.
Others have since documented similar findings. So, we will accept 4% as typical.
At the best Fundamental 5
campuses, Critical Writing is observed 15 to 20% of the time. So, it still does not occur all the time, but
look at it this way, 20% is just a 400% improvement over the typical
classroom. That is significant. But I also think it is reasonable.
Let’s break this down to make
the practice a little more actionable.
If we were to assume that the typical class period is 60 minutes long,
then 20% of class time would be 12 minutes. Which means that I believe a
reasonable goal in any core content classroom would be to embed a minimum of 8
to 12 minutes of Critical Writing in every lesson.
Think.
Work. Achieve.
Your turn...
- Call Jo at (832) 477-LEAD to order your campus set of “The Fundamental 5: The Formula for Quality Instruction.” Individual copies available on Amazon.com! http://tinyurl.com/Fundamental5
- Upcoming Conference Presentations: The Fundamental 5 National Summit (Keynote)
- Follow Sean Cain and LYS on www.Twitter.com/LYSNation and like Lead Your School on Facebook
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