My child became an excellent writer thanks to GDS middle school courses and the 8th grade debate program |
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Burke parent here… one of my favorite assignments that my sixth grader had at Burke was a “passerby writing assignment.” The students sat on the corner (benefits of an urban school) to write a full story about a passerby. The story had to include a full plot line. My daughter loves creative writing so this was right up her alley.
Burke overall is a truly creative school. As students progress the assignments reflect progressive rigor but never lose a creative bent. |
+1. Not parochial and not in DC proper but the Heights and Oakcrest are excellent at this |
Ditto. A number of kids have gone on to become Editor-in-Chiefs at their high school and college programs. |
| NCS. It’s writing instruction is what it’s known for. |
| My kids have had lots of excellent writing instruction in GDS MS and HS |
Agree with this. For a start they actually teach grammar which was not our experience in public. Lots of progress made since having more emphasis on grammar and good writing. |
I see the term “critical thinking skills” thrown about but what are some examples of these and how are they taught? |
For example, analytical writing develops critical thinking skills through the analysis of sources (books, poetry, etc.), argumentative reasoning, evaluation opposing points of view, and style. AI-generated texts are not known for "style." |
I second the Burke rec |
| Saint Anselm's Abbey (SAAS) has outstanding grammar, writing, study skills, etc. Also very few screens. |
Sorry. No. Have DS at SAAS. Not strong for writing. It may emphasize solid fundamentals but the depth isn’t there. |
| What is considered a wrong writing program? Are students learning to write 5-paragraph essays in middle school? |
*strong writing program |
OP here. I am looking for actual instruction in grammar, writing style, and form. And then review by a skilled teacher, followed by revision by the kid, at least for some assignments. I'd like an overall emphasis on the importance of learning to express oneself clearly, efficiently, and correctly. I worry a lot of what my kid is learning right now is more about "feel" and less explicit instruction. She can tell me that a certain sentence or phrase looks wrong and can often make it better but she has no idea why, including that she doesn't know the names of many parts or speech or style conventions. |