Why a writer’s journal when we have computers?
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- Brain research and writing:
- 2010 - German scientists research study - How Handwriting Trains the Brain - The Wall Street Journal by Gwendolyn Bounds, Oct 5 2010
- 2012- Indiana University study by Karin H. James and Laura Engelhardt - The effects on handwriting experience on functional brain development in pre-literate children by Karin H. James and Laura Engelhardt Dec. 2012
- Here are the other articles I also referenced:
- Brain research and writing:
Your Brain on Writing by Institute for Writers August 17, 2017 - I shared this one with my students and we discussed it
Other helpful links about writer’s journals:
How to Keep a Writing Journal You Won't Neglect
The more I use my journals ( I have different journals for different writing purposes) the more productive I am vs. just typing everything out on the computer.
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- Less distractions from social media
- Less false starts and less revision due to those false starts
- I don’t want to waste time because my writing time is precious
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Writer’s Journals Experimentation in my classroom
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- Last year, I didn’t have students take notes or brainstorm the first quarter in their notebooks. I wanted them to have more writing time.
- They actually had less because they spent too much time trying to relearn what I’d taught during mini-lessons.
- Students forgot what I’d just taught them - even if I had them repeat it back to me multiple times before they went to their computers
- When they did get down to writing - they had lots of stops and starts and most suffered from writer's block
- so assignments took 2 to 3 times longer than they do this year.
- By comparison, this school year all students had a writer’s journal
- They retain more info
- Students have notes at their fingertips
- They have drafts started
- More completed assignments over last year
- Less writer’s block
- The key takeaway: writing in a journal can help engage your mind more productively and creatively than just typing on a keyboard
What we use our writer’s journals for:
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- Mind-mapping: Get your free download by going to www.teach2write.com/start-write-now-guide
- Freewriting - writing nonstop for a set amount of time like 5-10 minutes
- Listing - as many ideas about a topic as you can
- Sketching/Drawing - maps, characters, scenes, storyboards, one-pagers
- Practice techniques
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- Example: trying different POV
- Example: trying different thesis statements for essays With my students
- For myself: main point I want to make in a blog post or podcast
- Outlining or planning
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I would be absolutely lost without being able to write down my ideas.
My writer’s journal is a mess, so my computer docs don’t have to be.
When I type into the computer BEFORE journaling, the quality of my ideas suffer and it takes twice as long to write anything because I’m always revising
Conclusion: Here are some actionable steps writers and teachers can take
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- Download freebie: Start Write Now Guide
- Get a notebook that’s comfortable for you and start trying the strategies before you give it to your students
- How does it help you? What struggles are you having?
- Using a journal or writers journal it’s just like any other tool - consistency is key - Work on it every day
- Rate, comment and subscribe- I will use your comments to help me improve this podcast so I can better help you with The Write idea.
- Thank you so much for listening- I look forward to hearing from you!
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