More Writing, Less Grading—it’s true!

            I want
students to write more, but I want to grade less. It just so happens I found an
avenue to make this happen.
            For five
weeks in a row, I’ve had my sophomores spend the first half of block writing
about a selected passage from Jane Eyre.
During the second half of block, they use a single-point rubric to peer edit in
a round-robin fashion.
            After that,
each student decides which essay she would want to turn in for a grade. I
collect the “keepers” but I don’t grade them. The next week, after another
timed write and round of peer editing, I pass the keepers back out. Once again,
students choose between the essay they wrote today and the keeper from last
week. I collect the keepers again, and so on. It reminds me of being at the eye
doctor: “Which one is better? 1 or 2? Better here … or here?”
            Today is
the last week, and at the end of the day, I will have a stack of keepers to
grade. They will have written five in-class essays and I only have to grade
one.
            Here are some
of the benefits:
  • Students do not receive a letter
    grade until the final one, so they have to look beyond “the bottom line” and
    actually think about how they are doing
  • Students engage regularly with
    the rubric to better understand how to write well
  • Students learn to rely on their
    peers for feedback instead of seeing the teacher as the only expert in the room
  • Students rely on their instincts
    and self-evaluative skills—they take ownership of their writing
  • Each week is another opportunity
    to out-do the last keeper, so students are motivated to do their best each time
    (you should see them scribbling away!)
  • If a student misses class or has
    a bad day, she knows she will have four other opportunities, so it takes the
    stress level down
  • In-class, handwritten writing reduces
    cheating
  • It’s great for formative assessment:
    I can quickly read through the stack of keepers and intervene individually for
    comprehension gaps or writing skill gaps
  • Students are compelled to
    consider key passages from Jane Eyre
    that they may have glossed over in their reading
  • Students have choice in which of
    their essays receives a grade
  • Students practice a type of
    passage study they will see on the SAT and AP tests
  • Increased writing volume and frequency
  • Students receive instant feedback
    on the same day from their peers
  • Students get to see how 2-3 other
    students approached the same passage and prompt
  • Peer editing happens while the
    writing itself is fresh in their minds
  • Students talk to each other about
    their approaches while they do their round-robin peer editing

            I’m so
excited about how well this works and hope to adapt it going forward.