Let’s Help Your Students Learn to Edit their Writing
So, you want your students to be able to edit their own work? Find capitalization and punctuation errors and fix them before they turn in their assignments? I have taught second grade for 21 years and every fall, when I get my new students, they still need to learn this important skill.
Gradual Release of Teacher Support
First of all, teachers finding the errors and pointing them out is fine. Peer editing is okay, in my opinion, but don’t we want to students to end up finding and editing their own errors? Here are some things that have worked for me.
I like to use the gradual release model for students; however, some students become independent much more quickly than others. At the beginning of the year, I start the new second graders out by looking over their work with them and directing students with comments like, “Before I take this, you need to make sure there is a capital letter at the start of every sentence” or “Is this the end of your writing? What do you need there so we know it is the end?” Then, a few weeks later, or depending on the students I have, maybe a month later, I start introducing the traditional editing marks. A circle where punctuation is missing is one of them, and I use two underlines for capital letter errors (I think the tradition mark is three underlines, but honestly, second graders only need two). Students get the papers back in a “work that needs to be fixed bin” and are expected to take care of editing the errors and returning the assignments.
Here are two examples from my students where you can see editing marks in use. (The activity is the Reader Response from my How Chipmunk Got his Stripes resource).
Checklists
Then, I start to integrate checklists ( I also still use editing marks after work has been turned in) that students use while they are writing. Sometimes checklists are integrated into the assignment, or students might get a separate checklist. Below is an example of the checklist that I use in my writing prompts. This one is from the Holiday Writing Prompt collection.
Peer Editing
Editing and Proofreading Resource
What works for you as far as strategies for helping kids to help them get good at editing their own work? Let us know in the comments below!