



I’ve written three graphic novels that will be published this August. In a strange way, this led to a Graphic Novel unit on Heroes at my school. It’s been a truly worthwhile venture so far. My students are learning a lot about the editing and revision processes.
There’s nothing–and I mean nothing–like modeling your own writing for students. I’m fortunate to have these books coming out, but I frequently model whatever type of writing we are doing for my students. As they watch me struggle with word choice, sentence variety, leads, closings, and everything in between, they come to realize that writing is a process for everyone, including teachers and professional writers.
Sometimes I use exemplary student writing that I’ve saved from previous years as a model, but I still try to do my own spur-of-the-moment modeling at each stage of the process.






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Congratulations on your graphic novels. That’s great!
Did you do all the drawings for the novels as well as the writing?
How long did it take to complete one? And you did three?
I wish I understood how you model the writing for your students. I’d like to know how you do that. Do you write something and then present it, or do you actually write in the presence of your students? Tell us more. A great blog.
Thank you. I don’t do the drawings. I only write the scripts. They took over a month, not counting all the time I thought about them before ever writing a word.
I try to write in the presence of my students, but I rarely do it without having a pretty good idea of what I’m going to say. When I make mistakes, it not a bad thing; students love to catch their teachers making errors and it helps them see that mistakes are a part of writing.