gifted education · Ready-to-Go Tip

Ready-to-Go Tip: Give it a Go!

Girl getting ready to write, with a "Give it a Go" caption

A Backstory

As a teacher of gifted students in a high-performing district, I struggle with ways to break my students from perfectionist tendencies. Some writers stick with writing they already know, and some just won’t write.

I ache to see students take risks, to become braver in writing. And while I often give them “permission” to write things that aren’t great, students like to stay in their comfort zone.

For the longest time, I’ve pictured my ideal: students recognize strong style or craft, then turn right around and try it for themselves. But how could I teach or structure it? Everything in my mind felt too contrived, and I wanted the spark to happen naturally.

And then it hit me. It was my own fear of failure that was holding me back. I was so concerned about wasting instructional time with lessons that “crashed and burned” that I had forgotten the joy of trying new things. That’s when I realized I had to do exactly what I was asking my students to do: GET BRAVE. And with that, “Give it a Go” time was born.

The Details

To begin, I gathered my fourth-graders and said, “Friends, I’ve been thinking a lot about our writing, and I think I have an idea that’s going to make us stronger as writers. But I’m a little bit nervous. You see, I have never, ever done what we’re going to do today with a class. EVER. I’d like to try an experiment. If it doesn’t work, it doesn’t work. But if it does, I think we might be onto something! I think we can really build something big here. Are you ready to give it a try?” Spoiler alert: they were IN.

We started with this excerpt from Natalie Babbitt’s Tuck Everlasting. I chose this passage for its astounding sensory imagery. Oh, to write with her skill!

We then discussed impactful phrases and their effect on us. Our class chart:

Table listing well-written phrases and what made them important

And then I said, “Friends, what if WE could have that impact on our readers? What if WE tried to offer description that affected our readers just as deeply? What if WE give it a go?”

Everyone, myself included, sat down for the next fifteen minutes to create sensory imagery in their writing. No one worked on a story they had already written; this was purely a time for invention and creation. 

Students writing at a table
Students were hard at work!

Some worked directly from Natalie Babbitt’s text, “translating” her writing into words of their own:

Student desriptive writing
“The sky was a canvas filled up with numerous swirls of indigo and magenta. The stars were scattered all across the canvas too, blinking at you like a shining beacon. The whole lake was mute except for the small squeaking wooden cabin. It was an old, small one, with the sounds every step you take and every wall you lean against…”

Others created entirely different worlds of their imagining:

Student descriptive writing
“The door was hanging on one of its hinges like a man hanging off the edge of a cliff, deep scratches in the mahogany wood. The bed had been disentegrated [sic] by the force of the vortex. The blue door had been shattered, leaving only hovering shards of glass spinning through the air…”

I even had one create their own vignettes from different scenes.

Student descriptive writing
“The cliff provided a stunning view of great rolling hills speckled with horse and sheep, and above them all, the wide open sky.”

So…how did it go? Judging from the intensity of work time and the quality of their writing, they took well to it. I asked students to reflect on how it felt to see a strategy and “give it a go.” All of them noted positive experiences. Here are some parting thoughts:

“I really liked writing vivid descriptions because i could use lots of beautiful adjective and create a painting of the setting while I’m writing.”
“It was fun to use words in [a] way not for communicating, and it was interesting that I approached the activity differently than my peers.”
“It was like I was in a studio, working on an art project.”

What’s Next

  • We’ll definitely “give it a go” again. It’s a quick way to teach style and craft moves such as changes in tense, using short sentences, or switching narrative point of view.
  • We’ll continue to use this time for new, short pieces rather than adding to current ones. It’s sometimes important for my writers to break from the constraints of their current work.
  • I’ll encourage students to take a strategy they like and employ it elsewhere in their writing, not just in my class, but in their homerooms as well.
  • I’ll remember to trust my own instincts as a teacher, to take risks with lessons and ideas that may or may not work, so that both my students and I can continue to learn and grow.
  • I’m encouraging colleagues to do the same: think of something new, get brave, and give it a go!

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3 thoughts on “Ready-to-Go Tip: Give it a Go!

  1. Inspiring, to me, too! How freeing to take one small thing away from a larger context- here, description of a scene. How fun to work on vivid description. Couldn’t you also “give it a go” and describe a character out of the blue- unconnected to any piece you were working on? You might fall in love with them and have to use them somewhere!

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