PIZZAZ!...
CHAIN STORIES
http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~leslieob/chains.html
PIZZAZ!
||
OPPortunities
in ESL
INFORMATION
ESOL Student Level: High Beginner+
Description: Students co-author a very short story in three
parts, a beginning, middle and end.
INSTRUCTIONS
- Set the Stage: (optional) use as a process-writing activity
(based on a
class experience), or pre-select a theme (e.g. mystery, false fable, soap opera, etc.).
- Set up the authoring teams.
Divide the class into groups of three. (See VARIATIONS below for
inter-class exchanges.)
- Everyone writes Part A (the "beginning" of the story), and
gives it
to another person in the group (either through email or on paper).
- Everyone writes Part B (the "middle" of the story), and gives
it to the third person in the group.
- The last person writes Part C (the "end"), and the story is
finished!
- Illustrate individually or in groups (optional).
- Hints:
- Make sure each person's name gets on the story at each turn.
- This works best if it's done in one day -- then copies are not
"lost" and chains are not "broken".
VARIATIONS
- Find a class with whom you can share exchanges.
Hint:
IECC
is a great
way to find an email exchange class for free!
- Faster results can be achieved in an email exchange if the
class that initiates the story (Part A writers) also finishes the story
(Part C). Then the story is only "gone" (in the hands of the other
class) for just one turn. Fewer stories are "lost" or remain unfinished
this way.
- More exchanges are possible if you give 2 turns in the middle
(i.e. 2 parts to the middle).
PIZZAZ!
||
OPPortunities
in ESL
Leslie Opp-Beckman, Technology Coordinator and ESL Instructor
E-mail:
leslieob@uoregon.edu
5212 University of
Oregon,
American English Institute
Eugene, Oregon 97403-5212 USA
Leslie Opp-Beckman, copyright 1994-2003. Permission to copy
and
distribute for in-class, non-profit use only.
URL: http://www.uoregon.edu/~leslieob/pizzaz.html
This page last updated: 20 October 2003