Tricks of the writing trade
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Andrew Edwards
Young writers at College View Elementary School let their creative
sides show last week as they learned a writing style that teaches and
tricks.
Teacher Debbie Bennett challenged her third-grade reading class to
write original “trickster tales” -- stories where the author teaches
a lesson by having one character outsmart another.
Bennett’s class broke into small groups and read their stories to
one another. After each child had a chance to share an original work,
the group picked a favorite tale that each group member would adapt
as a news article.
The tricky news stories would be compiled in “The Trickster
Tribune” after the class finished the assignment.
One of the groups selected 8-year-old Dashiell Powers’ story about
two farm cats as their favorite. In his story, a feline named Buster
tries to hide treats from another cat called Bogart. Bogart finds the
food anyway, and tells Buster he will share the cat snacks only if
Buster can open a can of cat food.
But Buster has a problem common to many cats when it comes to
using a can opener.
“He didn’t have opposable thumbs, so it took awhile,” Dashiell
wrote.
Buster takes so long to open the can that Bogart has time to eat
all the treats. Buster, who tried to eat all the snacks, doesn’t get
any.
And the lesson?
“I think it’s don’t be greedy,” Dashiell said.
Not all of the students attempted to teach such philosophical
concepts in their tales. Robert Rice, an 8-year-old who said he
watches “Tom and Jerry” all the time, wrote a story that had a mouse
defending itself from a cat by hiding a bomb in a sandwich.
The lesson, Robert said, is that the “cat knows to stay away from
mice now.”
Bennett used the trickster tales, as well as other genres like
tall tales, to teach her class basic elements of literature, such as
plot, character and conflict.
She said she tries to lead her students to “find their own
experiences in the literature and get them to respond in their own
way.”
Assigning the news articles, Bennett asked her class to come up
with headlines, a catchy introduction, and to identify the “who,”
“what,” “when” and “where” of a selected tricky tale, as well as to
explain how the story’s characters solved a problem and learned a
lesson.
Bennett’s students appeared to love the chance to tell stories and
be original.
“I could write anything,” 8-year-old Anthony Anderson said.
Some in the class already have big ideas about what they can do
with their stories.
“If you write them, maybe in a few years they’ll make them into TV
shows,” 8-year-old Noah Larson said.
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