Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Multigenre Magazine Parent Letter


Dear 4-324 Families,

I hope this letter finds you well. Our study of the American Revolution is well underway—the Declaration of Independence was signed, and the first fighting of the war has just begun. As part of our study, each student chose a big topic, event or person that they were interested in studying in more depth. Topics vary from important women of the American Revolution to Benjamin Franklin to the British surrender at Yorktown. For the past few weeks, students have been reading about their topics and taking notes on the important information they are learning.

We’ll be using the information we’ve learned to create our own Multigenre Magazines! Students can choose if they want to create their own magazine or if they want to work with other members of their group. However, each student will be responsible for producing six pieces in a variety of genres. These genres include: a nonfiction piece, a poem, a fictional piece, an essay or feature article, an artistic piece, and a piece in a new genre.

Within these genres, students will be given significant freedom to design their pieces. For example, a student studying George Washington might choose to write a narrative poem about Washington’s feelings about being elected president, or they might choose to convey the same information through a series of journal entries. They might even convey the information through a political cartoon! Pieces can be told through different perspectives and written for different audiences.

What is important is that each piece included in the magazine teaches readers something different about the topic.

Your child will be given significant time to work on this project in class, but they will also have regular homework assignments where they are asked to spend at least 15 minutes working on their project at home. Students will be expected to plan, draft, revise and edit their pieces. Since students work at different paces, their work at home will be based on where they are in the writing process.

Revision and editing checklists will be available in school for students to use. Samples of the genres students are writing in will also be available. If you need more resources to help your child be successful with this project, please let me know. I am happy to send them home.

I will be meeting with your child regularly throughout this project to make sure that their work meets the project’s requirements.

As part of their finished Multigenre Magazine, your child will need to:
¨ Write at least six pieces (additional quality pieces will be given extra credit), including:
o   A nonfiction piece
o   A poem
o   A fictional piece
o   An essay or feature article
o   An artistic piece
o   A piece in a genre they’ve never tried before
¨ Revise and edit their pieces to make sure they are the best possible quality
¨ Publish their pieces neatly (either by handwriting the pieces or typing them—an adult may help with the typing)
¨ Assemble their pieces into a magazine with a catchy cover (If multiple students are working together on a magazine, they only need one cover.)

The finished projects will be due on Wednesday, June 20. Our Multigenre Writing Celebration will be on Friday, June 22, at 8:40 a.m. in the classroom.

If you have any questions, please send a note in to school or email me. Your children are already generating sophisticated ideas for their magazines, and I cannot wait to see how the finished products turn out.

Best,

Katie

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