The Seven Steps to Writing Success Program
The Seven Steps to Writing Success program takes its concept from the way we learn sport.
- In tennis - we learn forehand, backhand, serve, volley and smash
- Volleyball - the basic skills are dig, set and spike
- Golf - we practise the drive, chip and putt
Yet in schools we ask students to 'write me story' - in other words, play the 'whole tennis match'. This is one of the main reasons why students struggle.
The Seven Steps program has proved to rapidly improve students' writing skills AND get them engaged in writing. Now in hundreds of schools in Australia and the USA, the Seven Steps program has helped make significant increases in students' national (AIM) test scores.
Here are the Seven Steps to Writing Success:
Step 1: Plan for Success
A joke, a movie, a TV sitcom, a book and a great story - what do they all have in common? They all follow the same 'story graph'. Start with a bang, slowly build up the tension and end on a real high point.
Step 2: Sizzling Starts
Start where the action is. Not at the beginning of the day where nothing is happening. Begin when the volcano starts oozing lava or as you walk in the door to the big disco competition.
Step 3: Tightening Tension
You must believe the hero (male or female) will fail. The tornado is too strong, the villain is too evil, the black forces of depression are too overwhelming. Yet, through strength, talent and determination, somehow our hero wins.
Step 4: Dynamic Dialogue
Think of dialogue as a mini play in the story. Let your characters walk, talk or even stalk - that's how we get to know them.
Step 5: Show, Don't Tell
If I tell you I am generous, do you believe me??? No way. But if I buy all 20 raffle tickets to help cancer research, are you more convinced? Actions really do speak louder than words.
Step 6: Ban the Boring Bits
Everyone gets up, gets dressed, travels to school...it's not exactly exciting. So why write about it? Ban all mention of the 'boring B' words - beds, breakfast and bus trips. Think like the movies, the heroes never travel, they just arrive...
Step 7: Exciting Endings
Would you tell a joke without knowing the punch line? If you want to build to a big climax you have to know where you are heading.
Want to implement the Seven Steps in your school?
