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Writing & Rhetoric Book 1: Fable Student Edition
The Student Books provide instruction and examples with plenty of space to write. Includes 14 lessons, each utilizing one of Aesop's Fables. Skills covered include summary, amplification, main idea, following an outline, and point of view and include the student's writing his own fable.
A Creative Approach to the Classical Progymnasmata—Think of the progymnasmata as a step-by-step apprenticeship in the art of writing and rhetoric. What is an apprentice? It is a young person who is learning a skill from a master teacher. Our students will serve as apprentices to the great writers and great stories of history.
Students are often expected to write with no clear model before them. Modern composition scolds traditional writing instruction as rote and unimaginative. It takes imitation to task for a lack of freedom and personal expression. And yet, effective communication from writer to reader always requires some sort of form and structure. Many of history's greatest writers learned by imitation. In other words, writing takes the same kind of determined study as ballet or diving. Creativity uses conventional form as a stage or a springboard from which to launch grand jetés and somersaults. Too often students are expected to tackle complex writing assignments without learning the necessary intermediate steps. The assumption is that because most everyone can speak English well enough to be understood, and form letters with a pencil, that everyone should be able to write well. Yet how many of us would expect a child to sit at a piano, without piano lessons, and play a concerto? Writing is never automatic.
The Writing & Rhetoric series method employs fluent reading, careful listening, models for imitation, and progressive steps. It assumes that students learn best by reading excellent, whole-story examples of literature and by growing their skills through imitation. Each exercise is intended to impart a skill (or tool) that can be employed in all kinds of writing and speaking. The exercises are arranged from simple to more complex. What's more, the exercises are cumulative, meaning that later exercises incorporate the skills acquired in preceding exercises. This series is a step-by-step apprenticeship in the art of writing and rhetoric.
Fable, the first book in the Writing & Rhetoric series, teaches students the practice of close reading and comprehension, summarizing a story aloud and in writing, and amplification of a story through description and dialogue. Students learn how to identify different kinds of stories; determine the beginning, middle, and end of stories; recognize point of view; and see analogous situations, among other essential tools. The Writing & Rhetoric series recovers a proven method of teaching writing, using fables to teach beginning writers the craft of writing well. This is the first in a series of 12 books that will train students over 6 years, starting in grades 3 or 4 and up.
Lessons include:
- Narration/telling it back (creating a natural sense of outline/sequence)
- Analogy—learning how this story is like/different from other stories
- Comprehension
- Sentence play/word play
- Rewriting (gaining a sense of internal structure of a piece of writing)
- Summary
- Amplification
- Rewriting given stories
- Speak It—experiencing the story from your own mouth (orally) with an audience for a different point of contact, often with some sort of change than the first time you heard it.
See the Support tab above for suggested schedule and rubrics.
This is a consumable item.
Includes 14 lessons, each utilizing one of Aesop's Fables. Skills covered include summary, amplification, main idea, followingan outline, and point of view and include the student's writing his own fable. Both books are about 150 pgs.
Product Format: | Paperback |
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Grades: | 3-4 |
Brand: | Classical Academic Press |
ISBN: | 9781600512162 |
Length in Inches: | 11 |
Width in Inches: | 8.5 |
Height in Inches: | 0.625 |
Weight in Pounds: | 1.1 |
I just pulled out WR Narrative 1 my son will be begin shortly, and he exclaimed, "Can I start reading the stories?"
I plan on continuing this curriculum. My daughter in high school, who overhears me working with my son, wishes it would have been available for her.
I started this program with my late-birthday 3rd grader. If he had been a younger 3rd grader, I would have delayed starting the program to 2nd semester or 4th grade.
My son never knew what to write and hated writing, but that changed after we started W&R: Fable. He really enjoyed one-on-one time, when we read the lesson and fable and then discussed the "Talk About It" questions together. They also provide MP3 audio files or CDs for purchase, but I did find that connecting at the beginning of the lesson was important for my son. The discussion questions are a wonderful guide for the instructor/parent to assess comprehension, so this program can also be used to supplement a reading program.
Each lesson cumulatively builds on different skills, such as varying nouns, verbs, and adjectives to change elements of a sentence. There is also some play with sentence structure, rewriting the sentence so the direct object is the subject. The program itself doesn't bog the student down with these technicalities. Instead, it focuses on having the student play with the words and realizing you *can* rewrite one sentence in many different ways.
The writing assignments start with rewriting a fable by changing the characters and actions/conflict with keeping the same moral, graduating to writing an original fable with choosing a moral from a list. They also introduce the student to writing from the 1st person perspective. A fable is brief and has a simple structure, so my son did not find the assignments too overwhelming or intimidating.
We completed Book 1 and continued onto Book 2. My son loves the program so much, he requested we continue to do lessons in Book 3 periodically, despite us starting IEW with our CC Essentials class next year. He's actually asking for *extra* writing?? Talk about a turn around.
Despite my love for the program and my son's enthusiasm, I did notice that his sentence structure and grammar declined! He was so determined to fit in as many details from his flights of fancy as possible, he became prone to run on sentences. Hopefully we will fix that. If I did this year over, I would also teach more grammar and mechanics in tandem.
I think whether your child is a "natural" writer or a reluctant one, they would enjoy W&R: Fable.
Thank you, Classical Academic Press, for this program. Please continue the good work of providing excellent classical materials that are manageable for home educators.
I’m confused at the question - are you asking if you could get through book 1 in a semester? You could if you had enough time to dedicate to it. We use it as supplemental to a full English curriculum, so it takes us all school year to get through this book as a supplement. You could easily get through this book in half the year if you focused more on it and then do book 2 next year. I hope that helps! :)
Yes, you could have them write answers in a notebook. Be aware there are a lot of fill-in-the-blank type exercises where writing on the page would be a lot more satisfying for the student. (Check out chapters 1-3 on the Classical Academic Press website to see what I mean!) Classical Academic Press gives permission to make copies of the book for students in a single household, so I scanned the pages I wanted ahead of time, and made multiple copies of them. More work for me, easier for the kids.
This program covers listening, speaking, and writing. Hence, literature is what is critical to add. However, the publisher recommends alternating this program with their Well Ordered Language program which covers grammar.
I think the teacher manual is a very helpful component to this curriculum. It does include answers to the questions in the student book and it also has helpful hints and more detailed explanation to use in teaching your child. This writing curriculum works best when the teacher-parent is involved in the writing assignments - I would not simply give your student the workbook and expect them to complete the lessons and writing projects on their own.
Yes. I refer to it often. It has tips and helps in it and examples for the kids to hear when writing their own works. The examples are great for comparisons to their writing about where they could improve.
I absolutely love this series! It is rigorous without being boring! Classical and creative!
Love this curriculum!
Wanted my 4th grade daughter to benefit from a writing program (writing and rhetoric) which I have come to really like and appreciate. My middle school son used Books 5 and 6 in a co-op class in the…
Classical School of Dallas curriculum