The HISTORY® Channel is running a contest for students ages 7-13 called the Kid Pickers Pick and Tell National Student Contest, based on their program, American Pickers, in which Mike Wolfe and Frank Fritz search for interesting historical items at flea markets, estate sales, old barns, and other such places.
Elementary and middle school students are invited to go on their own quest to find t unique historical items, collectibles, or other memorabilia in their community. Students then write short essays of 500 words or less describing their historical item they have picked and its significance.
The Grand Prize, First Place, and Second Place winners will receive $10,000, $5,000, and $3,000 scholarships respectively, and will travel to Mike Wolfe's Antique Archaeology story in Nashville, TN.
Download the rules and entry forms at www.history.com/shows/american-pickers/pages/pick-and-tell. The essays must be submitted by May 17, 2013.
It sounds like a fun way to make local history personal and to practice those essay-writing skills. Good luck to all
Showing posts with label essay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label essay. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
Sunday, December 4, 2011
Contest Helps Students Develop Reflective Writing Skills
Now that NaNoWriMo is over, it's time for us to refocus our writing classes on non-fiction writing. There is a national contest on a wonderful topic that may be just the thing to help us!
The Center for the Book in the Library of Congress, in partnership with Target Stores, is running a reading-writing competition called Letters About Literature. In it, students write a personal letter to an author of one of their favorite books to tell them why that book changed the way they think about themselves or the world. The book can be fiction or nonfiction, even poetry, speeches, short stories, or graphic novels, but it can not be a comic strip or song lyric (even if published in a book). Also, the author can be living or dead.
The competition is divided into three levels. Level 1 is for 4th-6th grade (students must be at least nine in order to participate) and letters are expected to be 100-400 words long. Level 2 is 7th-8th grade, with letters that are 300-600 words. Level 3 is for high schoolers (9th-12th grade) with a recommended 500-800 page length. Students can enter through their schools or as individuals, and homeschoolers are specifically encouraged to enter (apparently a number of winners have been homeschooled).
While the exercise is worthy just in itself, there are some great prizes for the winner. Two national winners for each level will get to choose a favorite library (school or community library) to receive a $10,000 grant from Target. Those winners will also each get a personal Target gift card for $500. There will also be four national honors awards for each level; the national honor awards come with a $1,000 grant to a favorite library and a personal $50 Target gift card.
The website also has a great 36-page Teacher's Guide with lesson plans and worksheets to help students write an appropriate reflective essay on their chosen book. The worksheets not only develop generic essay writing skills, such as crafting an engaging opening paragraph, but lead students to see the difference between a reflective essay and other types of writing, such as book reports, literary analysis, or a simple fan letter.
All in all, this looks like a wonderful project to me. I've already discussed it with my son, and we definitely plan to be working on it this month to be ready to submit something by the deadline, which is January 6, 2012. It combine something we love (books) with something we need to develop (nonfiction writing) with a focus on appreciation, which is a virtue that we trying to expand on during this holiday season.
We hope lots of you will join us in this competition. If you do, please enter the book that you (or your child/ren or student/s) choose to write about in the comments below.
The Center for the Book in the Library of Congress, in partnership with Target Stores, is running a reading-writing competition called Letters About Literature. In it, students write a personal letter to an author of one of their favorite books to tell them why that book changed the way they think about themselves or the world. The book can be fiction or nonfiction, even poetry, speeches, short stories, or graphic novels, but it can not be a comic strip or song lyric (even if published in a book). Also, the author can be living or dead.
The competition is divided into three levels. Level 1 is for 4th-6th grade (students must be at least nine in order to participate) and letters are expected to be 100-400 words long. Level 2 is 7th-8th grade, with letters that are 300-600 words. Level 3 is for high schoolers (9th-12th grade) with a recommended 500-800 page length. Students can enter through their schools or as individuals, and homeschoolers are specifically encouraged to enter (apparently a number of winners have been homeschooled).
While the exercise is worthy just in itself, there are some great prizes for the winner. Two national winners for each level will get to choose a favorite library (school or community library) to receive a $10,000 grant from Target. Those winners will also each get a personal Target gift card for $500. There will also be four national honors awards for each level; the national honor awards come with a $1,000 grant to a favorite library and a personal $50 Target gift card.
The website also has a great 36-page Teacher's Guide with lesson plans and worksheets to help students write an appropriate reflective essay on their chosen book. The worksheets not only develop generic essay writing skills, such as crafting an engaging opening paragraph, but lead students to see the difference between a reflective essay and other types of writing, such as book reports, literary analysis, or a simple fan letter.
All in all, this looks like a wonderful project to me. I've already discussed it with my son, and we definitely plan to be working on it this month to be ready to submit something by the deadline, which is January 6, 2012. It combine something we love (books) with something we need to develop (nonfiction writing) with a focus on appreciation, which is a virtue that we trying to expand on during this holiday season.
We hope lots of you will join us in this competition. If you do, please enter the book that you (or your child/ren or student/s) choose to write about in the comments below.
Labels:
books,
contest,
curriculum resource,
essay,
non-fiction,
writing
Sunday, February 13, 2011
Persian Fairy Tales, Small Worlds, Bananas, and the Power of the Internet
I love words (as regular readers of this blog might have realized, since I use so many of them!) One of my favorite words is "serendipity," which Wikipedia defines as "denotes the property of making fortunate discoveries while looking for something unrelated, or the occurrence of such a discovery during such a search." And while I have long loved the word, and work it into my conversation and writings as often as is appropriate (another word like it that I love is "cacophonous," which the occasion to use arises, alas, all too often), it was not until tonight that, perhaps inspired by my recent post on the word history game Etymologic, I looked up the derivation of the term. (Man, what a sentence. And while I think it is grammatically correct, my homework is to try to diagram it. It's what I tell my son to do, so I need to follow my own advice.)
Anyway, it turns that, according to my favorite etymology resource, the Online Etymology Dictionary, that serendipity was actually coined by a specific person--namely, Wallace Walpole--on a specific date--January 28, 1754. He said he created it from a Persian fairy tale called "The Three Princes of Serendip," within which the protagonists "were always making discoveries, by accident and sagacity, of things they were not in quest of."
So I don't know what worked for the ancient Persians, but my favorite vehicle for serendipity these days is the good old hyperlinked World Wide Web. I can easily begin with a simple task (like looking up the etymology of the word serendipity) and get lost for 30 minutes in Persian literature and foreign languages and translation difficulties and who knows what else. But blogging is a particularly great vehicle for these serendipitous encounters, as people seek out your site while you seek out their posts, based on some common interests.
That happened to me today when, in following up a comment someone made on one of my posts, I discovered a marvelous resource. Another homeschool mom out there is writing a great blog about her homeschooling adventures under the name of SmallWorld at Home. I'm not sure where the name comes from, but to me it brings to mind William Blake's wonderful words:
Maybe that's just me, who has 19th century poets on the brain as we study them along with our 19th century history--but what a lovely way to describe what we do as homeschoolers, and, really, as parents in general.
But more to the point, however, is the fact that this past week, we've spent a lot of time on writing--fiction, non-fiction, and quasi-fiction (see my son's blog, The Madisonian Blog, to see how easily he can morph one into the other). Specifically, we have been working on mastering the Five Paragraph essay. He is taking a class at our homeschool coop on this topic, where the teacher has been doing a masterful job of trying to move the students from their preferences for storytelling to the tighter format of an essay. But the real work needs to be done at home, where they do their actual writing. So we've done draft after draft after draft on my son's essay, which is about the history of bananas (which turn out to be a fascinating not fruit, but technically an herb).
So what do I find at SmallWorld at Home but a very useful post on writing an essay, with this oh-so-validating comment:
So bless you, SmallWorld mom! It's worth all the time and effort after all....
If you want to read her resources about writing essays, click here to read that post. She also has a whole wonderful series about creative writing that is especially geared to beginning and reluctant writers. Look at this neat link she has created for that resource:

So I'm really grateful that I live in a time of technology-facilitated serendipity, and for the support I get for my journey from all these other bloggers and web writers whose insight I soak up, even if we never meet.
Anyway, it turns that, according to my favorite etymology resource, the Online Etymology Dictionary, that serendipity was actually coined by a specific person--namely, Wallace Walpole--on a specific date--January 28, 1754. He said he created it from a Persian fairy tale called "The Three Princes of Serendip," within which the protagonists "were always making discoveries, by accident and sagacity, of things they were not in quest of."
So I don't know what worked for the ancient Persians, but my favorite vehicle for serendipity these days is the good old hyperlinked World Wide Web. I can easily begin with a simple task (like looking up the etymology of the word serendipity) and get lost for 30 minutes in Persian literature and foreign languages and translation difficulties and who knows what else. But blogging is a particularly great vehicle for these serendipitous encounters, as people seek out your site while you seek out their posts, based on some common interests.
That happened to me today when, in following up a comment someone made on one of my posts, I discovered a marvelous resource. Another homeschool mom out there is writing a great blog about her homeschooling adventures under the name of SmallWorld at Home. I'm not sure where the name comes from, but to me it brings to mind William Blake's wonderful words:
To see the world in a grain of sand, and to see heaven in a wild flower, hold infinity in the palm of your hands, and eternity in an hour.
Maybe that's just me, who has 19th century poets on the brain as we study them along with our 19th century history--but what a lovely way to describe what we do as homeschoolers, and, really, as parents in general.
But more to the point, however, is the fact that this past week, we've spent a lot of time on writing--fiction, non-fiction, and quasi-fiction (see my son's blog, The Madisonian Blog, to see how easily he can morph one into the other). Specifically, we have been working on mastering the Five Paragraph essay. He is taking a class at our homeschool coop on this topic, where the teacher has been doing a masterful job of trying to move the students from their preferences for storytelling to the tighter format of an essay. But the real work needs to be done at home, where they do their actual writing. So we've done draft after draft after draft on my son's essay, which is about the history of bananas (which turn out to be a fascinating not fruit, but technically an herb).
So what do I find at SmallWorld at Home but a very useful post on writing an essay, with this oh-so-validating comment:
If you spend a whole year perfecting the 5-paragraph essay and its various types (descriptive, narrative, expository, persuasive, etc.), you'll have accomplished much of what is covered in a basic freshman composition class. Imagine how far ahead your student will be if he is familiar with the format in middle school and fluent by high school!
So bless you, SmallWorld mom! It's worth all the time and effort after all....
If you want to read her resources about writing essays, click here to read that post. She also has a whole wonderful series about creative writing that is especially geared to beginning and reluctant writers. Look at this neat link she has created for that resource:
So I'm really grateful that I live in a time of technology-facilitated serendipity, and for the support I get for my journey from all these other bloggers and web writers whose insight I soak up, even if we never meet.
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