10 Writing and Assessment Prompts For Students - From Abbreviation to Acknowledgment
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10 Writing and Assessment Prompts For Students - From Abbreviation to Acknowledgment
ArticleAs a teacher, you care about your students REALLY learning the content you are trying to teach, Here's something else you probably know: Generating new, fresh, intriguing ways to prompt student writing and assessment can be a bit taxing; students want new, new, new all the time. Here are 10 prompts that might be new to you (and each includes a definition, if needed, and one or more sample expansions of the prompt): 1. abbreviation Since looking up words in the dictionary requires that one understand abbreviations for parts of speech, etc. have students create a list of abbreviations they need. 2. ABCs (also known as an abecedarian) Create an abecedarian of the classification system in science. List the alphabet down the side of the page and fill it in with as many vocabulary words related to this class that you can think of. 3. abridgment Write both the full version and an abridgment to solving a linear equation. 4. absolution Pick a crime, (i.e., murder, an ethics transgression, or something else that is in the news); write about what a person could do to absolve his/herself of that specific incident. 5. abstract (adj.) Describe the concepts of point, line, plane that take the concept from abstract to concrete. 6. abstract (n.) Write an abstract of a recent political speech. 7. acceptance speech You are accepting the award for best director of a foreign film at the Emmy's. Write an acceptance speech that acknowledges the country you filmed in and why you filmed there. 8. accolade You've earned an "A" for the semester. Write the accolades you'll receive since it's the first time you've earned an A in this subject. 9. account of... Write an account of the transitive property, i.e., if A=B, B=C then A=C and how it applies. 10. acknowledgment Health - Write an acknowledgment of something one of your parents has done for you. When you use this list to stimulate your thinking about (and inspire your creation of) writing assignments and assessments, you'll never run out of new ideas, I promise! And you probably are constantly on the lookout for new ideas. Consider various resources. For an expanded list of another *50+ Fabulous Writing and Assessment Prompts for Students,* just visit http://www.meggin.com/50PlusWritingPrompts.php where you can learn more about this resource. You might as well have as many ideas as possible and by accessing *50+ Fabulous Writing and Assessment Prompts for Students* and the ideas in this article, you'll have over 60 prompts plus examples for each and every prompt! About The Author
Meggin McIntosh, Ph.D.
Meggin McIntosh, Ph.D. of Emphasis on Excellence, Inc. Feel free to visit her site - http://www.OwningWordsforLiteracy.com - for loads of other free items you can access and download for yourself and your classroom. \\r\\n\\r\\n
Keywords ESL Writing, Writing Assessment, Evaluating Writing
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