Friendly
Letter Mini-Lesson
Outline
Day
1
- Reading/Writing Workshop: reading
literary models of Friendly Letters and responding to questions (pairs)
Day 2
- Whole class gets back together;
teacher begins discussion with the question, “What do you notice about the
format of the letters?” Through this discussion, teacher begins direct
instruction in teaching the parts of the friendly letter. (See Parts of
the Friendly Letter Handout).
- Teacher provides examples of friendly
letters from Dear Peter Rabbit
by Alma Flor Ada. Teacher projects letter (Dear Peter) on overhead while students refer to their paper
copies. Teacher leads students in a discussion as they identify the parts
of the friendly letter on their paper copy of the letter (See student
directions).
- Students then partner and complete
activities for Dear Pig One…
letter.
Day 3
- Teacher reads an episode from Frog and Toad Are Friends (Lobel,
1970) called The Letter. In this
story, Frog is disappointed about never receiving mail. Another option is
for the teacher to read Dear Annie
(Casely, 1991) which conveys the joy a grandfather and granddaughter
experience sending and receiving letters. The teacher and children then
discuss their feelings about sending and receiving mail.
- Students then brainstorm all the kinds
of friendly letters they might write along with the different purposes for
writing letters:
- To tell about a good book they have
read
- To send news about themselves
- To share what they are learning
- To give news of an upcoming event
- To provide information about their
hobbies
- To reveal something that happened in
school
- To share something from home
- To ask questions
- To request something
- Students complete the Letter-Writing
Guide (pre-writing activity).
Day 4
- Teacher reviews Reading/Writing Workshop
from Day 1 and specifically focuses students’ attention on the question
which asked students to list some interesting details. The teacher then
leads students in a discussion which explores sentence variety and word
choice; focus on creating exciting and engaging letters appropriate for
the intended audience. Teacher should reference literary models and write
down any interesting words, phrases, or descriptive sentences chosen by
the students.
- Teacher reviews tone of friendly
letters: personal, conversational, and informal. List on chart ways to
address various audiences in greetings and closings:
Greetings
Hi
Hello
Dear
Dearest
Greetings
What’s happening
|
Closings
Love
Sincerely
Your friend
Yours truly
Yours very truly
Affectionately
Very gratefully
yours
|
- Teacher asks students to review their
Letter-Writing Guides. Students are encouraged to make any necessary
changes.
- Students begin drafting their friendly
letters.
Day 5
- Students begin by going over their
Friendly Letter Checklist (See handout).
- Students make any necessary revisions.
- Students find a partner who is ready to
peer-revise (See Revising/Editing Friendly Letters) and they go to it!
- Teacher then revises/edits student
letters- focus on 6 + 1 Traits of writing: ideas, voice, and word choice
(See 6 + 1 Traits handout).