One of my students was flabbergasted when we talked about what happened on September 11th. We read a picture book called "September Roses" which focuses more on how people came together after the tragedy, and we talked about why something like that happened in America. That was a few weeks ago, and he's still writing about it in his Dialogue journal and asking me questions. We have an ongoing dialogue about that in his journal.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiDPX0aRh9hATPU8xX8MJicOj1XL7nAKd7sWEd2L7j5ts63LWwIkh6WYohCs2E6sITt8AuxN3LqBl33xoskw58kfRWnxXoHQBvtQUUcmENAx4oJnUFOqsn3LLn6COXuw5yGWPPUtTDvObA/s280/IMG_3032.jpg)
It's most important function is that my students feel they are heard in their dialogue journals. They write to me about what is going on in their lives, and I am able to listen and write back. If they told me the same stories on the way to P.E. I wouldn't be able to listen as well because my mind is always on 20 different things at any given point in the day.
It's an effective and fun tool that I plan to keep going the whole year! And it makes writing fun, the way it should be.
Amanda
I love this idea. What a great way to get kids excited about writing and have them express themselves positively all at the same time. Keep up the great work Mandy!
ReplyDeleteThanks Em!
ReplyDelete