Transcript Slide 1

Writing Tasks for S1
Writing Challenge
• Take a look out your window and begin to think
about the weather and the experiences you’ve
had over the past couple of weeks
• Your task is to complete one of the following
pieces of writing, using the weather as
inspiration:
• A collection of two or three poems
• A piece of personal-reflective writing
• A short story or diary entry
Poetry
• There are different types of poem you
could try writing, including rhyming, nonrhyming, acrostic, mesostic,
personification or haiku.
• Here’s some advice for writing a few of
these…
Acrostic
• An acrostic poem is a form in which the title, key or
theme-word appears, in bold and/or capitals, down the
left-hand side of the page, so that each line begins with a
word starting with each letter of the theme-word.
Winter has brought snow and
Ice and cold
Nights.
The ground is frost-covered and
Every tree hibernates, waiting for the
Rain or sun to come again.
Mesostic
• A mesostic poem is a form in which the title, key or
theme-word appears, in bold and/or capitals, in a
vertical line down the page, and through the heart of
the text, so that each line of the poem contains one
of its letters. Each line may consist of several words
or only one, as in:
So cold
and Nowhere
to find cOver.
Where is the sun?
Personification
• Choose an item such as a snowflake, or tree and
personify it in a poem, allowing it to speak for itself
as if it was alive and had a voice and personality.
GRASS
By Carl Sandburg (1878-1967)
Pile the bodies high at Austerlitz and Waterloo,
Shovel them under and let me work-I am the grass; I cover all.
And pile them high at Gettysburg
And pile them high at Ypres and Verdun.
Shovel them under and let me work.
Two years, ten years, and passengers ask the conductor:
What place is this?
Where are we now?
I am the grass.
Let me work.
Haiku
• Japanese haiku traditionally comprises 17 syllables
within 3 lines, arranged in a 5,7,5, fixed syllabic
pattern.
• Examples (Iain Haugh 1H2) :
• Light headed ocean,
• Flowing long as the big blue,
• Crashing on rough rocks.
• Starting as a bud,
• Strengthening with rain and sun,
• Soon to be brown oaks.
Personal-Reflective Writing
• Alternatively you could write about one of
your recent experiences.
• Have you been stranded anywhere on the
roads?
• Have you had any exciting or scary
moments in the bad weather?
• Have you done anything memorable with
your days off school?
Personal-Reflective Writing
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Write in first person (Use “I” and “we”)
Include your thoughts.
Include your feelings.
Use lots of detail and description (use
adjectives, verbs, adverbs)
• Use a wide vocabulary
• The writing should be true (though you can
exaggerate slightly to liven it up).
• Make clear how the events, experiences and
people you described have affected you, or
explain what you learned.
Imaginative Writing
• If you prefer to use your imagination, you
could write a short story set in a cold
climate or based around a blizzard or
snowstorm.
• Short stories are best when there is only
one main event and only one or two main
characters, so keep it simple!
• Ideas to include…
Ideas to Include
• Similes – comparing
two things using “like”
or “as” e.g. “My love is
like a red, red rose.”
(Robert Burns)
• Metaphors –
comparing two things
saying one thing is
another e.g. “All the
world’s a stage”
(William Shakespeare)
• Alliteration – repeating
the same consonant
sound at the beginning
of more than one word
for a particular effect e.g.
Freddy felt the soft fur of
his feline friend.
• Onomatopoeia – words
that, when said aloud,
sound like or imitate the
noises they describe e.g.
snap, crackle and pop!
Imaginative Writing
• Alternatively, you could write some diary
entries of an arctic explorer or even
someone trapped in their car overnight in
the snow!
• Begin by writing “Dear Diary” and
remember to include plenty of details,
thoughts and emotions about what your
character is experiencing and feeling
Word Bank
Here are some words you might use,
whichever task you choose
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Crunch
Crisp
Flurry
Thick
Deep
Tingling
Stinging
White
Opaque
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Crumbling
Solid
Flakes
Slippy
Sliding
Smooth
Rough
Numb
Throbbing
Good luck!
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Whooshing
Bright
Whistling
Thud
Screech
Nipping
Fresh
Grey
Dark