Teaching and Learning Handbook (A Best Practice Guide)
Teaching and Learning Handbook (A Best Practice Guide)
Writing Frames
Writing frames can be a good way to provide our students with a support of ‘scaffold’ when carrying out a writing task. They are particularly useful for students who struggle with extended writing, or for those who struggle with planning and organisation.
Benefits of using writing frames include:
- Helping students understand the structure of the task.
- Giving guidance on style for different parts of the task.
- Leading students to cope with more sophisticated writing tasks.
- Building confidence for some students.
Dangers of using writing frames include:
- Limiting creativity and originality of approach.
- Reducing a writing task to a box filling exercise.
- Making students to dependant on frames.
- Becoming too generic and not linked to a specific task.
Here is an example of a writing frame from the National Literacy Trust.
Art-Writing Frame for a Critical Study
Structure |
Useful Starters |
Used Vocabulary
|
Introduction: Describe the work – pretend you are telling someone who cannot see it |
………………………..was completed by …………….. in…………….. The work portrays…………………… |
Suggests, conveys, conjures up, recalls, recreates, when looked at closely, from a distance |
Artist’s intention |
I think the artist is trying to………………………………..
The reason I think this is because……………………….. |
Exaggerate, distort, conjure up, recreate, observe, reflect, express, mood or ideas, explore material, line, tone, texture, colour, shape, see, feel, think, imagine |
Source of inspiration and influences |
I think the artist worked from ………because……………………… The artist prepared for this work by………………………………………… |
Observation, memory, imagination, supporting sketches, photographs |
Your reaction |
The work makes me feel……….. Because………………………………… |
Happy, sad, suggests, evokes, conveys, mood, feeling, atmosphere, recalls, reminds me of |
Use of form |
This work has been composed to ………………………… |
Balanced, symmetrical, foreground, background, arrangement, composition, design, strong lines, lead the eye, shapes, small, large, angular, curved |
Use of colour, tone and texture |
The artist’s use of …………………. Suggests………………………………. I think he/she has done this to suggest…………………………………….. |
Hot, cold, bright, dull, vivid, sombre, pastel, clashing, matching, range, variety, rough, smooth, broken |
Style |
The artists style is ……………….. I can tell this by ……………………. |
Technique, abstract, realistic, surrealistic |
Conclusion |
I like/dislike this work because……………….. |
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