Showing posts with label National Novel Writing Month. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Novel Writing Month. Show all posts

Monday, August 12, 2013

NANOWRIMO for Young Writers


About this time last summer I suggested a looksee at NaNoWriMo’s Young WritersProgram  because there you can find BRILLIANT ideas to help budding wordsmiths grow good stories. A little about the program, directly from the website:
 ·        NaNoWriMo is run by “The Office of Letters and Light,” a 501(c)(3) nonprofit based in Berkeley, CA
·     The Young Writers Program was founded in 2005, in response to the countless teachers who wrote in wanting to bring noveling to the classroom.
·        The Young Writers Program provides free Common Core-adapted curricula and student workbooks for all grade levels, as well as classroom kits to all educators teaching the program. Kids and teens also participate independently through our motivational, community-based website.


If you’re a classroom teacher, I’m guessing the “free” and “Common Core-adapted” bits have got your attention. And those are good things! But, really, it’s the innovativeness and sense of fun in the lesson plans that are apt to brighten these last hazy weeks of summer, whether you’re planning fall classes or looking for something creative to do with kids around a kitchen table. Here is the link to the lesson plan portal: http://ywp.nanowrimo.org/lesson-plans. Note that curricula are stored in Google Docs, which makes it all very easy. Common Core connections are listed at the top of each page. One of my favorite plans is “How to Write Really Good Dialogue,” for upper elementary students (Lesson Plan 11), but you’ll find your own faves, for sure.
If, while meandering this path, you find yourself longing to do some writing of your own, don’t miss the quirky and cool resources for grown-up writers on the main page (http://nanowrimo.org). NaNoWriMo’s novel-writing months have produced a lot of published books, many a total surprise to their creators! 
Case in point: The first draft of one of my YA novels (Four Things My Geeky-Jock-of-a-Best-Friend Must Do In Europe, Darby Creek 2006) was created during a NaNoWriMo binge one fall. I never imagined that something written in 30 days could end up in bookstores, libraries, book fairs, and now on e-readers. 



Monday, July 30, 2012

SETTING THE WRITING RABBLE ON FIRE


There may be a swath of summer still ahead, but if you’re a teacher, right about now you probably can’t get fall off your mind. I know I can’t. Each day when I watch the sun pop over the mountains and set the morning mist ablaze, I think about how I want to be that sun to my students. Not bake them and send them indoors to watch streaming video, but infuse them with artistic energy!
Laura Krauss Melmed’s nifty “endeavor to involve other people” in her literary life (see her July 9 post) got me thinking about how young writers, too, like to write in a crowd. And that got me thinking about NANOWRIMO.
If you’ve never heard of this, it’s “National Novel Writing Month,” run by the nonprofit Office of Letters and Light, a bunch of very clever writing zaniacs. (Neologisms like that are just the kind of word-fun encouraged by the Nanowrimoids.) It is probably best known as a collective of aspiring novel writers who binge-write for the month of November each year. I actually wrote a first draft of one of my teen novels during one of their writing sprees, and it was then that I discovered their ridiculously fun resources for educators and students.
Their “Young Writers Program” is chockfull of totally free and well-designed stuff: pep talks from popular authors; downloadable workbooks to help kids of all ages write stories with strong characters, settings and plots; and gizmos like the “Dare Machine”—today’s dare was to “make one of your characters speak pig Latin or another made-up language.” Students LOVE this, and the intense camaraderie of a writing month sparks some incredible scribblings.
If you want to see how the Office of Letters and Light can help you create in your students a burning desire to write, check out:  NaNoWriMo Young Writers Program.