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Title Page

                                                                         Introductory Context



Your Name: Stephanie Baker
Book Title: Chanda’s Secrets by Allan Stratton
Title of Lesson: Reading Comprehension of Chanda’s Secrets through RAFT activity and
reflection
Grade Level: 9

Four-part Performance Objective:
Given a list of choices for role, audience, form, and topic, students will be able to analyze the
interactions between characters by producing a piece of writing that combines the four choices in
a way that is supported by the text and by writing a reflective essay that supports their creative
decisions with references to examples in the text. They will be able to complete the activity with
100% accuracy in creativity, textual evidence, and cohesiveness in combination of role,
audience, form, and topic.



Standards and Background Information

                                                   Ohio ELA Academic Content Standards



Reading Process: Concepts of Print, Comprehension Strategies and Self-Monitoring
Strategies
   • Apply reading comprehension strategies to understand grade appropriate text.
Reading Applications: Literary Text
   • Analyze interactions between characters in literary text and how the interactions affect
       the plot.
   • Explain and analyze how the context of setting and the author’s choice of point of view
       impact a literary text.
Writing Process
   • Formulate writing ideas and identify a topic appropriate to the purpose and audience
   • Determine the usefulness of organizers and apply appropriate pre-writing tasks.
   • Use revision strategies to improve the style, variety of sentence structure, clarity of the
       controlling idea, logic, effectiveness of word choice and transitions between paragraphs,
       passages or ideas.
   • Edit to improve sentence fluency, grammar and usage.
•  Apply tools to judge the quality of writing.
   •  Prepare writing for that is legible, follows an appropriate format and uses techniques such
      as electronic resources and graphics.
Writing Applications
  • Write responses to literature that extend beyond the summary and support references to
      the text, other works, other authors or to personal knowledge
  • Produce letters (e.g., business, letters to the editor, job applications) that follow the
      conventional style appropriate to the text and that include appropriate details and exclude
      extraneous details and inconsistencies.
  • Use documented textual evidence to justify interpretations of literature or to support a
      research topic.
Writing Conventions
  • Use correct spelling conventions.
  • Use correct punctuation and capitalization.
  • Demonstrate understanding of the grammatical conventions of the English language.


                                                                     Background Information



Language Arts Strands:
Throughout this activity students will be able to utilize the reading, writing, speaking, and
listening strands. The reading strand occurs as students return to Chanda’s Secrets for
information to support their connections in their writing. The writing strand will be addressed as
the students are drafting, revising, and copy-editing their creative pieces. Students will also
engage in prewriting activities such as brainstorming and freewriting, as well as take notes in the
writing workshop groups. The speaking strand will be applied when students get into writing
workshop groups and read aloud their writing. Likewise, the listening strand will happen when
students in the writing workshop groups are listening to their group members read their works.

Primary Domains: All three domains will be addressed in this lesson.
Cognitive
Students will acquire knowledge as they develop their points of view and appropriate material
for their role, audience, form, and topic. To do this, they will have to look up and recall
important events within the novel and apply them to their RAFT combination. This will be
demonstrated especially in the reflective papers that provide an explanation for the methods used
in the RAFT piece.
Affective
Students will develop sympathy for the characters in Chanda’s Secrets when they are asked to
write from or to one of the characters’ points of view. Connecting to the characters in this way
will help students to develop skills of compassion and “putting themselves in others’ shoes.”
Psychomotor
Students will engage in this domain as they interact with peers in the writing workshop. After
prewriting writing, students will read aloud and discuss their pieces with group members in an
active environment.
Skill Level
The skills of knowledge, comprehension, application, synthesis, and evaluation from Bloom’s
Taxonomy will be addressed in this essay.
        The knowledge and comprehension skills overlap as students are asked to return to
examples in the novel to develop the voice and content that will be used in their writings.
Comprehension is probably the stronger of these skills, since mere recollection isn’t sufficient to
develop these points of view. Students will further use comprehension as they consider
important events of the text for use in their writing. The application level is apparent when
students support the choices they made in their creative writing in their reflective essay. The
process of separating and selecting important evens culminates in the application of these events
to the writing assignment. Synthesis is addressed when students formulate their creative writing
and reflective writing pieces. They must take all of the information in the novel and select and
present certain elements in a comprehendible way within their RAFT writing. Finally, students
will use evaluation as they work in their writing workshop groups to judge their own and their
group members’ work. This evaluation can in turn be synthesized to edit and polish their works.

Multiple intelligences
This lesson uses linguistic, spatial, interpersonal, and intrapersonal multiple intelligences.
Linguistic
This MI is inherent in the writing activity students are asked to complete. They will use
prewriting and editing activities to develop appropriate writing. They will also be able to use the
reflective essay to explain their methods. The writing workshop addresses the spoken part of the
linguistic MI as students read their works aloud.
Spatial
This MI will be addressed through prewriting activities. Students can develop their ideas in any
number of ways, including brainstorming in webs that provide a visual resource for organization.
This web can also be used to formulate the reflective essay.
Interpersonal
This MI is essential to writing from the different roles in RAFT. Students will be able to use
their social abilities to develop a work from a character’s point of view. The writing workshop
also utilizes this strength as students work with each other to fine-tune their pieces of work.
Intrapersonal
This MI is most notably addressed in the reflective essay component. Here, students can explain
why they did what they did in their RAFT piece. Their ability to look within themselves will
help explain their train of thought and meaning in crafting their RAFT work.

Developmental Context
Before this lesson plan can be effective, students must already be familiar with constructing the
various forms under the RAFT choices. Teachers can modify this by limiting the forms allowed.
However, form is an important freedom for students to gain confidence in their writing. Students
should also be familiar with the topics listed in the RAFT choices. Teachers can modify these as
needed, but it would be hard to conduct this activity without a discussion on AIDS and the
impact on each of the characters. This activity is more of an opportunity for students to
demonstrate what they have learned than to teach these ideas. As a result, previous lessons on
form and discussions on themes (topics) and characters are important.
Timing
This activity should be given after the novel has been read to give the largest amount of freedom;
however it can also be adapted to take place in the middle of the novel and serve as an
anticipatory activity for the end of the novel. Overall the activity would take about four days.
The first day should be spent selecting a RAFT profile and formulating ideas through
brainstorming. The second day should involve research into the novel to support the connections
and methods used in the writing as well as the completion of a rough draft. The third day should
be spent in writing workshops and editing. The fourth day should be spent finalizing the RAFT
piece as well as constructing the reflective essay.

Resources and Materials
Chanda’s Secrets
Pencils, pens
Notebook paper
RAFT selection guide
Rubric
Guide for Writing Workshop



Procedure

Anticipatory Set
       How did you feel about the characters in the book? Was there any point where you
wanted to intervene and have someone come out and say something to another person? Do you
have any ideas for what you would like to see happen next?

Key Concept
       After teaching this lesson, I would like students to have a better understanding of
connections between characters in the novel and its importance (noted under Reading
Applications: Literary Text in ACS). I would also like students to connect with the novel
through these characters and the topics. Finally, after this lesson I would like to see students
produce a piece of creative work that still finds justification with evidence from the text.

Instructional Methods
       1. Direct Instruction/Whole Class Discussion: To begin the lesson, the teacher will
           begin by having students summarize the novel. Then he or she will ask students
           about frustrations they might have had with the characters and what they were or
           weren’t saying (see Anticipatory Set above). The students will respond to the
           questions and generate a short class discussion lasting about 5 to 7 minutes.
       2. Direct Instruction: Next, the teacher should introduce the RAFT activity. RAFT is
           a way of forming a piece of writing that supports student self-direction and creativity.
           Students are required to create a piece of writing by choosing one element from each
           of four categories: role, audience, format, topic. The teacher should explain what
           each of these means to the activity. The role is what position or voice the student will
take in the writing assignment. The audience is who they will be writing to in their
     role. The format is what genre they will be writing in, sometimes this can get as
     creative as making a poster or acting out a skit. Finally, the topic is what the writing
     piece must be about. This should take about 3 to 5 minutes
3.   Direct Instruction/Class Discussion: The RAFT guide can be predetermined by the
     teacher or developed collaboratively with the students. I would suggest developing it
     collaboratively with students, as this can also serve as an assessment to see who they
     remember from the novel, important topics/themes, and what formats they find
     interesting. A compromise can also be made with the teacher starting the guide
     beforehand and only leaving a few spots for student contribution. Generation should
     take about 3 to 5 minutes
         • RAFT Sample Selection Guide
                         Role         Audience         Format           Topic
                        Esther           Iris           Letter          AIDS
                       Chanda           Esther        Dialogue          Friendsh
                                                                    ip
                      Mrs. Tafa      Dr. Chilume         Essay          Family
                      Emmanuel        Mrs. Tafa       Classified        Superstit
                                                      Ad Series     ion
                        AIDS          Chanda’s       Monologue/         Lilian
                      Welcome         neighbors        Speech       Kabelo
                        Center                                      Friendship
                                                                    Project
                        Jonah          Chanda            Rant           Morality
4.   Individual Work/Guided Practice: When students have chosen their components
     of RAFT, they will work independently to freewrite their ideas that connect their
     choices. These freewrites can be collected by the teacher to determine whether the
     class understands the assignment. The teacher can also use this time to walk around
     and observe students and their writing to see if they understand. This should take
     about 5 minutes.
     After the students have completed freewrites, they should consult the novel for more
     ideas to add to their brainstorming, as well as to look for support for what they have
     already written. Then, the students should start working on their rough drafts. This
     should take about 25 minutes.
5.   Small Group Instruction: After students have completed their rough drafts, they
     should get into small groups of about 3 or 4 students for a writing workshop. The
     teacher should set up expectations for while they are in the workshop such as the ones
     below. This should take about 20 minutes
         • Sharers read their RAFT stories aloud
         • Listeners write their comments down while listening
                 Comments should include
                 • What did you like about the work?
                 • What four RAFT choices did the person pick?
                 • Suggestions to make the RAFT choices clearer
                 • Lingering questions about the work
6.   Individual Work: Finally, students should bring together the advice they received in
their writing workshop to create another draft of their RAFT piece. This can be done
           at home. The reflective essay can also be done at home or in class lasting about 15
           minutes.
               • The reflective essay should include the student’s rationale for how he or she
                   connected the four components of RAFT with evidence from the novel

Modeling
        Modeling can take place several places in this lesson. The first will take place as the
teacher is explaining how to do a RAFT activity as a verbal example connecting Chanda, Esther,
Letter and AIDS: “Chanda writes a letter to Esther to warn her about her activities with tourists
and the possibility of getting AIDS.” The second will take place before freewriting, when the
teacher can share the freewriting he or she did when generating ideas for the model. The third
will take place when the model RAFT essay is read to the class before the writing workshop.
The modeling in this instance goes into asking the students to act as the writing workshop for the
teacher’s piece of writing. The teacher asks the students the same questions that he or she
expects to be asked and answered in the student writing workshops. Finally, the teacher will
share the reflective essay before the students sit down to write their own.

Monitoring to Check for Understanding
         Monitoring for understanding is constant throughout the lesson. First, when reviewing
the book, teachers will ask students for the summary. This will enable the teacher to hear how
the students would summarize the novel and what events seem the most important to them.
Second, monitoring will take place when the students are freewriting and looking up information
in the novel. The teacher will walk around and read the freewritings and have individual
conferences with students. The teacher will ask students questions inspired by the rubric, such as
“What evidence in the novel made you think of this interaction?” and “How do you plan on
organizing this information?” It would also be beneficial to ask the students what evidence in
the text inspired them to write in the tone they chose. Third, the teacher will walk around and
listen-in on the writing workshops. This way the teacher will not only hear the types of
questions and suggestions students have, but will also an understanding of where the students are
in their own understanding based on the types of questions they are asking.

Guided Practice
   • Ask students to get in writing workshop groups based on what role they chose in their
      RAFT piece.
   • Ask students to discuss with one another where they got their evidence for the
      interactions they chose.
   • Ask students to pay specific attention to certain questions (listed in Procedures) in their
      writing workshop groups.

Independent Practice
   • Have students complete the freewriting activity on their own when assigned the activity.
   • Have students complete a rough draft of their RAFT writing to discuss in their writing
      workshops.
   • Have students work to fix grammatical mistakes on their own by reading their work aloud
      in the writing workshop.
Closure
Have students share their work via a gallery walk. Hang student RAFT papers around the room
and have students silently walk around and read the papers. To make students read more than
one or two, extra credit points can be assigned for reading six or more papers. When the class is
done, have a discussion about how writing from the character’s point of view helped to
understand their role in the novel and important events associated with that character. Specific
questions include, “How did this writing assignment better help you understand the characters?
The events? And the themes?” and “How did you feel about writing on behalf of a character?
Did this help you to understand or come to terms with issues in the novel that previously
bothered you?”


Handout, Teacher Model, and Rubric

Handout including RAFT generated by teacher (or by class if given as an empty grid)

Teacher model of a RAFT activity connecting Chanda, Esther, Letter and AIDS
      Chanda writes a letter to Esther to warn her about her activities with tourists and the
      possibility of getting AIDS.

Rubric for RAFT activity and for reflection essay
What am I turning in?

                                   Freewrite brainstorming connections (2 pts)

                                   Rough Draft in the format chosen (3 pts)

                                   Revision after writing workshop (15 points)

                                   Reflection Essay that explains your choices and your rationale
                                      (5 pts)
  Role          Audience            Format              Topic
                                                             Total 20 pts
 Esther             Iris             Letter              AIDS
 Chanda           Esther           Dialogue          Friendship

Mrs. Tafa      Dr. Chilume           Essay             Family
                                 Classified Ad
Emmanuel        Mrs. Tafa                           Superstition
                                    Series
 AIDS                                               Lilian Kabelo
                Chanda’s          Monologue/
Welcome                                              Friendship
                neighbors          Speech
 Center                                                 Project
 Jonah           Chanda               Rant             Morality




   1. For this activity you will need to select one item from each of the categories
Chanda’s Secrets Book Cover:
                              Red Ribbon:
                              Clasped Hands:
                              Map of Africa:
            (please circle)to Blue Arrow: Microsoft Officewriting
                              construct a piece of Clip Art
                                                          based on the format you chose.
       2.   Freewrite some ideas regarding what you would write as your connection.
       3.   Look up specific examples in the novel that you can use to justify your writing.
                • Tone
                • Audience
                • Format
                • Topic
       4.   Write a Rough draft. It should be at least one page in length.
       5.   Writing workshop to work on content, organization, grammar, and justification.
       6.   Use suggestions and considerations from workshop to revise your draft.
       7.   Write a half-page reflection that puts your justifications and reasoning into
            text.
                                            Teacher Model

       RAFT choices: Role-Chanda, Audience-Esther, Format-Letter, Topic-AIDS

      I chose to think of a way to include my letter as an occurrence that could have
happened in the middle of the novel, but you do not have to do the same. So long as you
use all four elements of RAFT and can support your creative decisions with the text in
 your reflective essay you (e.g. You don’t make Chanda an African princess offering to
           pay for Esther’s AIDS treatment) you are free use creative license.

Dear Esther,
       Instead of dancing around the hard subjects, I’m just going to say it: I’m terrified
you’ll get AIDS. Today we finally talked about what you do when you hang around
Liberty Bell. I know that you said you just started hooking and that you always bring
condoms, but that’s what worries me.
       We both know how AIDS is transmitted, and it isn’t enough to just bring them. I
don’t think it matters if the men don’t like them. It probably means that they have been
with other women in the park, too. I know that you aren’t a whore, but what if the other
women are?
       People all around us are dying from AIDS and we just choose to ignore it, but I
can’t watch it happen to my best friend without trying to stop it in some way. Even if you
lose some business, you’ll still have your life. Hooking to save money to bring your
family together won’t do any good if you get AIDS along the way.
       I don’t think you’re a whore, and I know you’re probably getting upset at me as
you read this. I’m not trying to call you either one of these, though, I promise! You’re
still my best friend Esther that wants her family back. But that’s just it, you’re my best
friend and I don’t want to lose you. People die from AIDS, and I don’t want you to be
one of them. I don’t think I could lose my best friend. Please, Esther.


                                                                     Your friend,
                                                                           Chanda
e, describe the connection you made between the four components:
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________
                           Chanda’s Secrets RAFT Rubric
                           Please write down your choices:
                  Role _____________________
                  Audience _________________
                  Format ___________________
                  Topic ____________________




                                                                                                    2
                                            5                4                  3
                                                                                                  Needs              Total
                                          Great             Good            Acceptable
                                                                                               Improvement
                                        Adequately
                                      addresses by
                                     supporting from
                                                         Adequately
                                       the text with                        Adequately         Adequately
                Reflection Essay:                         addresses
                                      examples the                        addresses two of    addresses one      ___ x 1
                     Content                             three of the
                                       use of Tone,                           the four            of four
                                                             four
                                         Audience,
                                      Format, Topic

                                     Applies each of
                                                         Applies 3 of     Applies 2 of the     Only applies
                 RAFT: Content        the 4 RAFT                                                                 ___ x 2
                                                           the 4                four          one of the four
                                      components
                                                            Rare                               Considerable
                                       Consistently      mistakes in       A few mistakes     mistakes in use
                                       uses correct     use of correct    in use of correct      of correct
                                         spelling,        spelling,            spelling,         spelling,
               RAFT: Conventions                                                                                     ___ x 1
                                     punctuation and     punctuation      punctuation and       punctuation
                                      capitalization,        and            capitalization,         and
                                      and grammar       capitalization,     and grammar       capitalization,
                                                        and grammar                            and grammar
                                                                             Exists with
                                                                                                Exists but
                                                                              thoughtful
                   Rough Draft             -----             -----                             inconsistent      ___ x 1
                                                                          revisions marked
                                                                                               with Revision
                                                                             and applied
                   Freewriting
                                           -----             -----              ----              Exists             ____ x 1
                  (All or nothing)
                                                                                                                     ____ /
                      Total
                                                                                                                25

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Lesson Plan

  • 1. Title Page Introductory Context Your Name: Stephanie Baker Book Title: Chanda’s Secrets by Allan Stratton Title of Lesson: Reading Comprehension of Chanda’s Secrets through RAFT activity and reflection Grade Level: 9 Four-part Performance Objective: Given a list of choices for role, audience, form, and topic, students will be able to analyze the interactions between characters by producing a piece of writing that combines the four choices in a way that is supported by the text and by writing a reflective essay that supports their creative decisions with references to examples in the text. They will be able to complete the activity with 100% accuracy in creativity, textual evidence, and cohesiveness in combination of role, audience, form, and topic. Standards and Background Information Ohio ELA Academic Content Standards Reading Process: Concepts of Print, Comprehension Strategies and Self-Monitoring Strategies • Apply reading comprehension strategies to understand grade appropriate text. Reading Applications: Literary Text • Analyze interactions between characters in literary text and how the interactions affect the plot. • Explain and analyze how the context of setting and the author’s choice of point of view impact a literary text. Writing Process • Formulate writing ideas and identify a topic appropriate to the purpose and audience • Determine the usefulness of organizers and apply appropriate pre-writing tasks. • Use revision strategies to improve the style, variety of sentence structure, clarity of the controlling idea, logic, effectiveness of word choice and transitions between paragraphs, passages or ideas. • Edit to improve sentence fluency, grammar and usage.
  • 2. • Apply tools to judge the quality of writing. • Prepare writing for that is legible, follows an appropriate format and uses techniques such as electronic resources and graphics. Writing Applications • Write responses to literature that extend beyond the summary and support references to the text, other works, other authors or to personal knowledge • Produce letters (e.g., business, letters to the editor, job applications) that follow the conventional style appropriate to the text and that include appropriate details and exclude extraneous details and inconsistencies. • Use documented textual evidence to justify interpretations of literature or to support a research topic. Writing Conventions • Use correct spelling conventions. • Use correct punctuation and capitalization. • Demonstrate understanding of the grammatical conventions of the English language. Background Information Language Arts Strands: Throughout this activity students will be able to utilize the reading, writing, speaking, and listening strands. The reading strand occurs as students return to Chanda’s Secrets for information to support their connections in their writing. The writing strand will be addressed as the students are drafting, revising, and copy-editing their creative pieces. Students will also engage in prewriting activities such as brainstorming and freewriting, as well as take notes in the writing workshop groups. The speaking strand will be applied when students get into writing workshop groups and read aloud their writing. Likewise, the listening strand will happen when students in the writing workshop groups are listening to their group members read their works. Primary Domains: All three domains will be addressed in this lesson. Cognitive Students will acquire knowledge as they develop their points of view and appropriate material for their role, audience, form, and topic. To do this, they will have to look up and recall important events within the novel and apply them to their RAFT combination. This will be demonstrated especially in the reflective papers that provide an explanation for the methods used in the RAFT piece. Affective Students will develop sympathy for the characters in Chanda’s Secrets when they are asked to write from or to one of the characters’ points of view. Connecting to the characters in this way will help students to develop skills of compassion and “putting themselves in others’ shoes.” Psychomotor Students will engage in this domain as they interact with peers in the writing workshop. After prewriting writing, students will read aloud and discuss their pieces with group members in an active environment.
  • 3. Skill Level The skills of knowledge, comprehension, application, synthesis, and evaluation from Bloom’s Taxonomy will be addressed in this essay. The knowledge and comprehension skills overlap as students are asked to return to examples in the novel to develop the voice and content that will be used in their writings. Comprehension is probably the stronger of these skills, since mere recollection isn’t sufficient to develop these points of view. Students will further use comprehension as they consider important events of the text for use in their writing. The application level is apparent when students support the choices they made in their creative writing in their reflective essay. The process of separating and selecting important evens culminates in the application of these events to the writing assignment. Synthesis is addressed when students formulate their creative writing and reflective writing pieces. They must take all of the information in the novel and select and present certain elements in a comprehendible way within their RAFT writing. Finally, students will use evaluation as they work in their writing workshop groups to judge their own and their group members’ work. This evaluation can in turn be synthesized to edit and polish their works. Multiple intelligences This lesson uses linguistic, spatial, interpersonal, and intrapersonal multiple intelligences. Linguistic This MI is inherent in the writing activity students are asked to complete. They will use prewriting and editing activities to develop appropriate writing. They will also be able to use the reflective essay to explain their methods. The writing workshop addresses the spoken part of the linguistic MI as students read their works aloud. Spatial This MI will be addressed through prewriting activities. Students can develop their ideas in any number of ways, including brainstorming in webs that provide a visual resource for organization. This web can also be used to formulate the reflective essay. Interpersonal This MI is essential to writing from the different roles in RAFT. Students will be able to use their social abilities to develop a work from a character’s point of view. The writing workshop also utilizes this strength as students work with each other to fine-tune their pieces of work. Intrapersonal This MI is most notably addressed in the reflective essay component. Here, students can explain why they did what they did in their RAFT piece. Their ability to look within themselves will help explain their train of thought and meaning in crafting their RAFT work. Developmental Context Before this lesson plan can be effective, students must already be familiar with constructing the various forms under the RAFT choices. Teachers can modify this by limiting the forms allowed. However, form is an important freedom for students to gain confidence in their writing. Students should also be familiar with the topics listed in the RAFT choices. Teachers can modify these as needed, but it would be hard to conduct this activity without a discussion on AIDS and the impact on each of the characters. This activity is more of an opportunity for students to demonstrate what they have learned than to teach these ideas. As a result, previous lessons on form and discussions on themes (topics) and characters are important.
  • 4. Timing This activity should be given after the novel has been read to give the largest amount of freedom; however it can also be adapted to take place in the middle of the novel and serve as an anticipatory activity for the end of the novel. Overall the activity would take about four days. The first day should be spent selecting a RAFT profile and formulating ideas through brainstorming. The second day should involve research into the novel to support the connections and methods used in the writing as well as the completion of a rough draft. The third day should be spent in writing workshops and editing. The fourth day should be spent finalizing the RAFT piece as well as constructing the reflective essay. Resources and Materials Chanda’s Secrets Pencils, pens Notebook paper RAFT selection guide Rubric Guide for Writing Workshop Procedure Anticipatory Set How did you feel about the characters in the book? Was there any point where you wanted to intervene and have someone come out and say something to another person? Do you have any ideas for what you would like to see happen next? Key Concept After teaching this lesson, I would like students to have a better understanding of connections between characters in the novel and its importance (noted under Reading Applications: Literary Text in ACS). I would also like students to connect with the novel through these characters and the topics. Finally, after this lesson I would like to see students produce a piece of creative work that still finds justification with evidence from the text. Instructional Methods 1. Direct Instruction/Whole Class Discussion: To begin the lesson, the teacher will begin by having students summarize the novel. Then he or she will ask students about frustrations they might have had with the characters and what they were or weren’t saying (see Anticipatory Set above). The students will respond to the questions and generate a short class discussion lasting about 5 to 7 minutes. 2. Direct Instruction: Next, the teacher should introduce the RAFT activity. RAFT is a way of forming a piece of writing that supports student self-direction and creativity. Students are required to create a piece of writing by choosing one element from each of four categories: role, audience, format, topic. The teacher should explain what each of these means to the activity. The role is what position or voice the student will
  • 5. take in the writing assignment. The audience is who they will be writing to in their role. The format is what genre they will be writing in, sometimes this can get as creative as making a poster or acting out a skit. Finally, the topic is what the writing piece must be about. This should take about 3 to 5 minutes 3. Direct Instruction/Class Discussion: The RAFT guide can be predetermined by the teacher or developed collaboratively with the students. I would suggest developing it collaboratively with students, as this can also serve as an assessment to see who they remember from the novel, important topics/themes, and what formats they find interesting. A compromise can also be made with the teacher starting the guide beforehand and only leaving a few spots for student contribution. Generation should take about 3 to 5 minutes • RAFT Sample Selection Guide Role Audience Format Topic Esther Iris Letter AIDS Chanda Esther Dialogue Friendsh ip Mrs. Tafa Dr. Chilume Essay Family Emmanuel Mrs. Tafa Classified Superstit Ad Series ion AIDS Chanda’s Monologue/ Lilian Welcome neighbors Speech Kabelo Center Friendship Project Jonah Chanda Rant Morality 4. Individual Work/Guided Practice: When students have chosen their components of RAFT, they will work independently to freewrite their ideas that connect their choices. These freewrites can be collected by the teacher to determine whether the class understands the assignment. The teacher can also use this time to walk around and observe students and their writing to see if they understand. This should take about 5 minutes. After the students have completed freewrites, they should consult the novel for more ideas to add to their brainstorming, as well as to look for support for what they have already written. Then, the students should start working on their rough drafts. This should take about 25 minutes. 5. Small Group Instruction: After students have completed their rough drafts, they should get into small groups of about 3 or 4 students for a writing workshop. The teacher should set up expectations for while they are in the workshop such as the ones below. This should take about 20 minutes • Sharers read their RAFT stories aloud • Listeners write their comments down while listening Comments should include • What did you like about the work? • What four RAFT choices did the person pick? • Suggestions to make the RAFT choices clearer • Lingering questions about the work 6. Individual Work: Finally, students should bring together the advice they received in
  • 6. their writing workshop to create another draft of their RAFT piece. This can be done at home. The reflective essay can also be done at home or in class lasting about 15 minutes. • The reflective essay should include the student’s rationale for how he or she connected the four components of RAFT with evidence from the novel Modeling Modeling can take place several places in this lesson. The first will take place as the teacher is explaining how to do a RAFT activity as a verbal example connecting Chanda, Esther, Letter and AIDS: “Chanda writes a letter to Esther to warn her about her activities with tourists and the possibility of getting AIDS.” The second will take place before freewriting, when the teacher can share the freewriting he or she did when generating ideas for the model. The third will take place when the model RAFT essay is read to the class before the writing workshop. The modeling in this instance goes into asking the students to act as the writing workshop for the teacher’s piece of writing. The teacher asks the students the same questions that he or she expects to be asked and answered in the student writing workshops. Finally, the teacher will share the reflective essay before the students sit down to write their own. Monitoring to Check for Understanding Monitoring for understanding is constant throughout the lesson. First, when reviewing the book, teachers will ask students for the summary. This will enable the teacher to hear how the students would summarize the novel and what events seem the most important to them. Second, monitoring will take place when the students are freewriting and looking up information in the novel. The teacher will walk around and read the freewritings and have individual conferences with students. The teacher will ask students questions inspired by the rubric, such as “What evidence in the novel made you think of this interaction?” and “How do you plan on organizing this information?” It would also be beneficial to ask the students what evidence in the text inspired them to write in the tone they chose. Third, the teacher will walk around and listen-in on the writing workshops. This way the teacher will not only hear the types of questions and suggestions students have, but will also an understanding of where the students are in their own understanding based on the types of questions they are asking. Guided Practice • Ask students to get in writing workshop groups based on what role they chose in their RAFT piece. • Ask students to discuss with one another where they got their evidence for the interactions they chose. • Ask students to pay specific attention to certain questions (listed in Procedures) in their writing workshop groups. Independent Practice • Have students complete the freewriting activity on their own when assigned the activity. • Have students complete a rough draft of their RAFT writing to discuss in their writing workshops. • Have students work to fix grammatical mistakes on their own by reading their work aloud in the writing workshop.
  • 7. Closure Have students share their work via a gallery walk. Hang student RAFT papers around the room and have students silently walk around and read the papers. To make students read more than one or two, extra credit points can be assigned for reading six or more papers. When the class is done, have a discussion about how writing from the character’s point of view helped to understand their role in the novel and important events associated with that character. Specific questions include, “How did this writing assignment better help you understand the characters? The events? And the themes?” and “How did you feel about writing on behalf of a character? Did this help you to understand or come to terms with issues in the novel that previously bothered you?” Handout, Teacher Model, and Rubric Handout including RAFT generated by teacher (or by class if given as an empty grid) Teacher model of a RAFT activity connecting Chanda, Esther, Letter and AIDS Chanda writes a letter to Esther to warn her about her activities with tourists and the possibility of getting AIDS. Rubric for RAFT activity and for reflection essay
  • 8. What am I turning in? Freewrite brainstorming connections (2 pts) Rough Draft in the format chosen (3 pts) Revision after writing workshop (15 points) Reflection Essay that explains your choices and your rationale (5 pts) Role Audience Format Topic Total 20 pts Esther Iris Letter AIDS Chanda Esther Dialogue Friendship Mrs. Tafa Dr. Chilume Essay Family Classified Ad Emmanuel Mrs. Tafa Superstition Series AIDS Lilian Kabelo Chanda’s Monologue/ Welcome Friendship neighbors Speech Center Project Jonah Chanda Rant Morality 1. For this activity you will need to select one item from each of the categories
  • 9. Chanda’s Secrets Book Cover: Red Ribbon: Clasped Hands: Map of Africa: (please circle)to Blue Arrow: Microsoft Officewriting construct a piece of Clip Art based on the format you chose. 2. Freewrite some ideas regarding what you would write as your connection. 3. Look up specific examples in the novel that you can use to justify your writing. • Tone • Audience • Format • Topic 4. Write a Rough draft. It should be at least one page in length. 5. Writing workshop to work on content, organization, grammar, and justification. 6. Use suggestions and considerations from workshop to revise your draft. 7. Write a half-page reflection that puts your justifications and reasoning into text. Teacher Model RAFT choices: Role-Chanda, Audience-Esther, Format-Letter, Topic-AIDS I chose to think of a way to include my letter as an occurrence that could have happened in the middle of the novel, but you do not have to do the same. So long as you use all four elements of RAFT and can support your creative decisions with the text in your reflective essay you (e.g. You don’t make Chanda an African princess offering to pay for Esther’s AIDS treatment) you are free use creative license. Dear Esther, Instead of dancing around the hard subjects, I’m just going to say it: I’m terrified you’ll get AIDS. Today we finally talked about what you do when you hang around Liberty Bell. I know that you said you just started hooking and that you always bring condoms, but that’s what worries me. We both know how AIDS is transmitted, and it isn’t enough to just bring them. I don’t think it matters if the men don’t like them. It probably means that they have been with other women in the park, too. I know that you aren’t a whore, but what if the other women are? People all around us are dying from AIDS and we just choose to ignore it, but I can’t watch it happen to my best friend without trying to stop it in some way. Even if you lose some business, you’ll still have your life. Hooking to save money to bring your family together won’t do any good if you get AIDS along the way. I don’t think you’re a whore, and I know you’re probably getting upset at me as you read this. I’m not trying to call you either one of these, though, I promise! You’re still my best friend Esther that wants her family back. But that’s just it, you’re my best
  • 10. friend and I don’t want to lose you. People die from AIDS, and I don’t want you to be one of them. I don’t think I could lose my best friend. Please, Esther. Your friend, Chanda
  • 11. e, describe the connection you made between the four components: _______________________________________________________________________________________________________ Chanda’s Secrets RAFT Rubric Please write down your choices: Role _____________________ Audience _________________ Format ___________________ Topic ____________________ 2 5 4 3 Needs Total Great Good Acceptable Improvement Adequately addresses by supporting from Adequately the text with Adequately Adequately Reflection Essay: addresses examples the addresses two of addresses one ___ x 1 Content three of the use of Tone, the four of four four Audience, Format, Topic Applies each of Applies 3 of Applies 2 of the Only applies RAFT: Content the 4 RAFT ___ x 2 the 4 four one of the four components Rare Considerable Consistently mistakes in A few mistakes mistakes in use uses correct use of correct in use of correct of correct spelling, spelling, spelling, spelling, RAFT: Conventions ___ x 1 punctuation and punctuation punctuation and punctuation capitalization, and capitalization, and and grammar capitalization, and grammar capitalization, and grammar and grammar Exists with Exists but thoughtful Rough Draft ----- ----- inconsistent ___ x 1 revisions marked with Revision and applied Freewriting ----- ----- ---- Exists ____ x 1 (All or nothing) ____ / Total 25