Gå frakoblet med Player FM -appen!
138: Writing Tip Wednesday: Using a Personal Narrative Heart Map
Manage episode 439514076 series 3346073
Share what you thought about the episode by sending a text!
In this episode of the Shared Teaching Podcast, we explore the heart map—a simple yet powerful tool to help students brainstorm meaningful topics for personal narrative writing. Learn how to guide your students through the process of creating their own heart maps and discover how this tool can keep them engaged with writing all year long.
In today’s episode we’ll talk about:
- What a heart map is and how it helps students generate personal writing ideas
- Introducing the heart map to your class and guiding students in brainstorming important people, places, and memories
- Step-by-step instructions for creating and filling a heart map with details
- Using heart maps as inspiration for personal narratives and writing prompts
- Keeping heart maps relevant by adding new experiences throughout the year
SHOW NOTES / BLOG POST LINK: https://sharedteaching.com/heart-map/
Resources Helpful with Today's Episode:
- Second Grade Writing Units (narrative unit coming soon)
- Heart Map available to my email subscribers - sign up at SharedTeaching.com
Tune in to learn how heart maps can transform personal narrative writing in your classroom!
Rate, Review, and Follow on Apple Podcasts
If you enjoyed this episode and would like to help more people find this podcast, please consider rating and reviewing my show! Ratings allow me to help more primary teachers build literacy systems for writing and centers so they can leave school on time. Click here, scroll to the bottom, tap to rate with five starts, and select "Write a review." Don't forget to let me know your favorite part of the episode!
Not yet a follower of the podcast? If you are not a subscriber, you might miss out on future episodes. Follow here on Apple Podcasts or on your favorite podcast player.
144 episoder
Manage episode 439514076 series 3346073
Share what you thought about the episode by sending a text!
In this episode of the Shared Teaching Podcast, we explore the heart map—a simple yet powerful tool to help students brainstorm meaningful topics for personal narrative writing. Learn how to guide your students through the process of creating their own heart maps and discover how this tool can keep them engaged with writing all year long.
In today’s episode we’ll talk about:
- What a heart map is and how it helps students generate personal writing ideas
- Introducing the heart map to your class and guiding students in brainstorming important people, places, and memories
- Step-by-step instructions for creating and filling a heart map with details
- Using heart maps as inspiration for personal narratives and writing prompts
- Keeping heart maps relevant by adding new experiences throughout the year
SHOW NOTES / BLOG POST LINK: https://sharedteaching.com/heart-map/
Resources Helpful with Today's Episode:
- Second Grade Writing Units (narrative unit coming soon)
- Heart Map available to my email subscribers - sign up at SharedTeaching.com
Tune in to learn how heart maps can transform personal narrative writing in your classroom!
Rate, Review, and Follow on Apple Podcasts
If you enjoyed this episode and would like to help more people find this podcast, please consider rating and reviewing my show! Ratings allow me to help more primary teachers build literacy systems for writing and centers so they can leave school on time. Click here, scroll to the bottom, tap to rate with five starts, and select "Write a review." Don't forget to let me know your favorite part of the episode!
Not yet a follower of the podcast? If you are not a subscriber, you might miss out on future episodes. Follow here on Apple Podcasts or on your favorite podcast player.
144 episoder
Усі епізоди
×Velkommen til Player FM!
Player FM scanner netter for høykvalitets podcaster som du kan nyte nå. Det er den beste podcastappen og fungerer på Android, iPhone og internett. Registrer deg for å synkronisere abonnement på flere enheter.