Sunday, January 29, 2012

What is Quality?

I am struggling with the term "quality work" for my students. I am faced with a few problems in my definition of quality and my acceptance of student work that has mistakes or is not perfect. This question has come to me most recently when working with my students on blogging. As a blogger myself, I know that my post are not all perfect, although I try to put my best writing and work out, I know that it is not perfect and may at times have mistakes. That being said, I also write, edit, revise, reread all at once, while I teach students the stages of the writing process as a paper and pencil process in separate steps: brainstorm, draft, revise, edit and finally digitally publish. Which then leads me to this question: do I need to improve my process, or do I need to allow them a bit more freedom in their own? I had a student say to me last week that he did not need to brainstorm, draft, revise or edit because he has his post "memorized" to which I said he needed to follow the writing process as that was the expectation. Another problem I face is when I ask my students to do this process, they are still making errors with clarity of message, fully developing ideas, and then some mechanics of spelling, capitalization, punctuation. So here I am with students using the writing process and still hitting publish on the blog post with errors or writing in need of more work. I continue to teach the parts of the writing process, model, give samples to do the work of revising and editing, share exemplars, and on and on. But what about the writing they complete now? Do I publish with mistakes and approach it as writing is a process and this is all a part of this student's journey and as they write more this will improve? Do I go over each child's blog and help them make every correction and pick the work apart and with it the joy of blogging? I want to have an end goal in mind, I want to have a definition of quality blogging, but I don't want to create a culture where quality means perfect. I also do not want to make it acceptable to post work that is not quality due to rushing through, not making corrections, not putting effort into revising, etc. These students are "young" writers and many are entering a stage in their education until recently have not done a lot of writing, but they also know the steps to revise and edit and often are completing them with high quality.

How do I find this balance? Having students produce quality writing, but allowing students to have some breathing room and not expecting error-free perfection?

If you would like to see more of their writing or leave them a comment please read the class blog.






2 comments:

  1. I see you use Kidblog as I do. Something that I love about Kidblog is that I can make 'private' comments to the students. After they send a post for publishing, I'll check it. I'll send them a private comment and suggest ways to make their post more clear or I'll suggest fixing punctuation & capitalization errors. Most of my students go back and try to work at the piece again. Some do not and after a while I'll end up publishing them anyway.

    The editing portion of the writing process is toughest for the kids. I think it takes such effort to write that they think they are done - even with all the modeling we do - they just want to be done.

    In this way I struggle with the same things you seem to.
    Thanks for sharing. I'll try to stop by and leave some of your students a comment.

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  2. Nancy,

    So good to know I am not in this alone. I agree that editing and revision is by far the process they want to speed through...but I find myself wanting to speed through it as well. I am going to take your advice and send the private message. I think that will be meaningful for my students and will help them see some areas to improve their writing.

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