Unit 4, Lesson 2
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Writing Workshop

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Writing Workshop




Part 1: Inbox Pop-Up Challenge (20 min)

The teacher projects or displays fake message pop-ups with no full texts, only visual situations: a birthday invitation, a missed class, a school event, a homework question, a sports day, a lost notebook, and a class trip.

Students decide:

Students answer orally first:

The teacher explains that good writing starts before writing: students must know the reader, purpose, format, and main message.

Part 2: Vocabulary Activation: Writer’s Toolbox Relay (15 min)


Part 3: Grammar and Mechanics Input: Punctuation Traffic System (25 min)

Examples:

Correct: “Hi Ana, I went to Quito last Saturday.”
Incorrect: “hi ana, i went to quito last saturday.”

Example:

“We visited the museum. It was interesting.”

Example:

“Can you come with us?”

Example:

“We played games, ate pizza, and watched a movie.”

Examples:

I’m = I am
can’t = cannot
don’t = do not

The teacher connects mechanics to text types:

  • greeting
  • friendly opening
  • reason for writing
  • details
  • question or invitation
  • closing
  • title
  • opening sentence
  • main information
  • details or examples
  • final comment or opinion

The teacher models both formats.

Informal email model:

Hi Leo,
How are you? I’m writing because our class is organizing a sports day on Friday. It will start at 10:00, and there will be games, music, and snacks. I think it will be fun. Can you come with us?
See you soon,
Mateo

Short article model:

A Fun Sports Day at School
Last Friday, our class organized a sports day. Students played football, basketball, and relay games. Many teachers helped with the activities. The event was exciting because everyone participated. In my opinion, we should organize it again next month.


Students work in teams. Each team receives “domino pieces” with parts of an informal email or short article. They must build the text in the correct order.

Email pieces:

Article pieces:

After building the text, the team reads it aloud and explains why that order works.

Part 1 – Human Keyboard Mechanics Game (15 min)

Students become “keyboard keys.” Some students are capital letters, commas, periods, question marks, apostrophes, and spaces. The teacher reads a messy sentence, and students physically move into place to fix it.

Students then say the corrected sentence aloud.


Part 2 – Voice-to-Text Repair (15 min)

The teacher gives students a messy spoken message. Students must turn it into a short, clear written email opening.

Students work in pairs and read their improved version aloud.


Each student says one writing rule before leaving.

Part 1 – Preparation: Mailbox or Magazine Choice (15 min)

Students choose one final product:

Option A: informal email of about 100 words
Option B: short article

They prepare a planning strip, not a full script.

Planning strip:


The classroom becomes two creation areas:

Mailbox Area: students write informal emails.
Magazine Area: students write short articles.

Students draft, peer-check, revise, and submit. Then they do a short “writer’s walk.” They do not read the full text to everyone. Instead, each student shares:

This makes the consolidation active, not only silent writing.


Part 3 – Writer’s Reflection Circle (15 min)

Students answer orally:


NEE – Agregar el tipo de adaptaciones curriculares

Principio II: Pautas 6.1 – 6.3 – 6.4 
Principio III: Pautas 7.1 – 8.1 – 9.1
ALUMNO 1: Constante monitoreo. Dar tiempo adicional para el desarrollo de la actividad y se reduce el número de ejercicios o se modifican los ejercicios con un nivel de dificultad reducido, de acuerdo con sus necesidades académicas. 
ALUMNO 2: Constante monitoreo, Dar tiempo adicional para el desarrollo de la actividad y se reduce el número de ejercicios o se modifican los ejercicios con un nivel de dificultad reducido, de acuerdo con sus necesidades académicas.
ALUMNO 3: Constante monitoreo. Corroborar que el contenido entregado en clase haya sido comprendido por la estudiante mediante retroalimentación.