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The Common Core Writing Book, K-5
Lessons for a range of tasks, purposes, and audiences.
By Gretchen Owocki , Saginaw Valley State University
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List Price: $42.50
Web/School Price: $34.00
COLLEGE PROFESSORS
Part of the series, share this resource.
“As we work within the Common Core, we must take care to not lose sight of meaningful teaching and learning. In working toward the new standards, kids are going to be doing hard things. But children can still write for reasons that matter. This is not inconsistent with the goals of the Common Core State Standards.” —Gretchen Owocki
“My goal with The Common Core Writing Book ,” writes Gretchen Owocki, “is to support K–5 teachers as they provide differentiated instruction in relation to the ten Common Core writing standards.” Gretchen presents a comprehensive framework of strategies that help you choose the best path for meeting students’ needs and the Common Core standards.
As she did for reading in the bestselling Common Core Lesson Book , Gretchen empowers teachers with information and proven practices. She breaks the writing anchor standards into manageable chunks, emphasizing differentiation, engagement, and writing for authentic purposes. She offers:
- a clear description of what each standard asks from students
- instructional decision trees that connect assessment to planning
- instructional strategies that gradually release responsibility to students
- suggestions for tailoring support to meet students’ individual needs.
“Because effective teaching does not emerge from a mandate, a state office, or a manual,” writes Gretchen Owocki, “we must avoid paths that cast educators as secondary decision makers or that offer quick solutions or static packages.” Whether you turn to The Common Core Writing Book to enhance your current curriculum or to design your own, Gretchen Owocki will help you create instruction that is standards focused and student centered.
(click any section below to continue reading)
- Text Types and Purposes: Anchor 1 Grade-Level Standards | Decision Tree | Demonstration | Collaborative Engagement | Independent Application
- Text Types and Purposes: Anchor 2 Grade-Level Standards | Decision Tree | Demonstration | Collaborative Engagement | Independent Application
- Text Types and Purposes: Anchor 3 Grade-Level Standards | Decision Tree | Demonstration | Collaborative Engagement | Independent Application
- Production and Distribution of Writing: Anchor 4 Grade-Level Standards | Decision Tree | Demonstration | Collaborative Engagement | Independent Application
- Production and Distribution of Writing Anchor 5 Grade-Level Standards | Decision Tree | Demonstration | Collaborative Engagement | Independent Application
- Production and Distribution of Writing: Anchor 6 Grade-Level Standards | Decision Tree | Demonstration | Collaborative Engagement | Independent Application
- Research to Build and Present Knowledge: Anchor 7 Grade-Level Standards | Decision Tree | Demonstration | Collaborative Engagement | Independent Application
- Research to Build and Present Knowledge: Anchor 8 Grade-Level Standards | Decision Tree | Demonstration | Collaborative Engagement | Independent Application
- Research to Build and Present Knowledge: Anchor 9 Grade-Level Standards | Decision Tree | Demonstration | Collaborative Engagement | Independent Application
- Range of Writing: Anchor 10 Grade-Level Standards | Decision Tree | Demonstration | Collaborative Engagement | Independent Application
- Download and share a flyer about The Common Core Writing Book
- Download a sample chapter to see how The Common Core Lesson Book helps with Anchor Standard 1
- View a sample of Gretchen's clear descriptions of the writing standards
- View one of Gretchen's helpful decision trees
- View an example of Gretchen's differentiation strategies for ELLs and entire classes
- View a sample of Gretchen's instructional strategies---prompts for opinion writing
"A warning label should come with The Common Core Writing Book: 'Be careful. Reading and using this book can be addicting to you and good for your students.' If you want a book that will reaffirm your thoughts about teaching writing, this book is for you. If you want a book that you can use tomorrow, this book is for you. If you want a book that will guide you through the new Common Core Standards without anxiety and trepidation, this book is for you. If you want a book that will help raise the rigor of your teaching, this book is for you." — Linda Biondi " A Common Core Writing Book That Understands Teacher Needs " Read the entire rave review at Middleweb
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Writing Guide with Handbook
(7 reviews)

Michelle Bachelor Robinson, Spelman College
Maria Jerskey, City University of New York
Toby Fulwiller, University of Vermont
Copyright Year: 2021
ISBN 13: 9781951693473
Publisher: OpenStax
Language: English
Formats Available
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Learn more about reviews.
Reviewed by Aimee Taylor, Assistant Professor, Clarke University on 1/9/23
This guide is appropriately comprehensive for first year and developing college writers. It covers, most importantly, the writing process. It also engages students in thought work about rhetorical effectiveness, information literacy, and... read more
Comprehensiveness rating: 5 see less
This guide is appropriately comprehensive for first year and developing college writers. It covers, most importantly, the writing process. It also engages students in thought work about rhetorical effectiveness, information literacy, and argumentation. The included handbook makes it helpful and easy to incorporate. Students will not have to access two separate texts to have a guide and handbook. This is great for planning and streamlining.
Content Accuracy rating: 5
From my understanding of the topic, this text is highly accurate.
Relevance/Longevity rating: 5
This text deals with contemporary issues that students will find valuable and important, like social media, demystifying college writing, cultural awareness, decolonization, antiracism, and multimodality. These are topics that are not only relevant today, but they will be persistent issues for years to come. The topics covered are in line with the themes and topics I frequently cover in my own classes, so I wouldn't need to supplement so much.
Clarity rating: 5
The text is clear and appropriate for first year college students (and anyone new to academic writing). One of the highlights of this book is that it does spend time explaining and clarifying typically challenging concepts, like rhetoric and argument. This will be helpful for not only students but for new faculty who are teaching writing for the first time.
Consistency rating: 5
This text appears consistent. The units have similar structures and features, "editing," "spotlight on...," and "glance at genre." I like this because it shows students that they can methodically look at writing in this kind of way.
Modularity rating: 5
The text is divided into modules already, which could be beneficial for new faculty teaching writing for the first time.
Organization/Structure/Flow rating: 5
Organization is the best quality of this text. They offer a helpful introduction, and subsequent units build up to more complicated writing processes. Again, for first time writing faculty, which can provide just as much help as the text does for the students.
Interface rating: 5
I appreciate that this text has instructor and student resources. The text easily navigable, the images are clear (not distracting), and students will not have to scroll through a ton of text (they can easily navigate from the left table of contents or the "next" button at the bottom of each section).
Grammatical Errors rating: 5
I didn't see any errors.
Cultural Relevance rating: 5
This text is quite the opposite of insensitive or offensive. It includes discussions of antiracism and decoloniality, which are important and urgent cultural issues that teachers and students alike to begin engaging with.
I look forward to implementing this text into my course. I am glad to have an open access text that does what I need it to do.
Reviewed by Sarah Lacy, Lecturer, Old Dominion University on 1/6/23
There are lessons on rhetoric, research, portfolios, as well as genre specific readings which does make this a relatively comprehensive Rhetoric and Composition text. I believe the title, "Writing Guide with Handbook" does not do the... read more
Comprehensiveness rating: 4 see less
There are lessons on rhetoric, research, portfolios, as well as genre specific readings which does make this a relatively comprehensive Rhetoric and Composition text. I believe the title, "Writing Guide with Handbook" does not do the comprehensiveness of the text enough justice, as this is much more than what I imagine a "writing guide" to be. I specifically like the "Spotlight on..." sections at the end of each chapter/section, as it allows the authors of the book to bring specific lessons to the students that appear to be new and relevant to our cultural conversation (for example, "Spotlight on... Technical Writing as a Career" and "Spotlight on... Bias in Language and Research" each enhance the other readings in their section which highlighting current issues in the field).
However, while this is a fairly comprehensive text, and I appreciate that it uses various perspectives on writing and academia, I do not believe there are enough writing process specific readings to be the only text for a First Year Writing course. However, it is an excellent resource in helping students understand the complexity of writing, and to envision how they will use writing outside of the composition classroom.
The authors' use of various writers in using their text as examples allows this text to work from an unbiased standpoint. The information provided in these sections reflects accurate depiction of the subject matter, and follows the necessary lessons for a writing class, specifically one concerned with rhetorical lessons.
This textbook has included relevant readings on current issues in the field of writing studies, specifically in potential bias in writing and research, as well as issues in language studies. The supplemental readings in this text are very current (Selena Gomez and Ta-Nehisi Coates for example), but also include classic readings (Mark Twain for example) that show the variety of voices that the authors of this text have considered. The social media based readings may need to be updated from time to time, but I think that is a benefit of providing such of-the-moment readings. The base of this text, however, is in the study of rhetoric and college writing which will remain relevant and useful to students and instructors.
The writing is clear and concise, and is written with undergraduate students in mind. I specifically like that in many sections there are reflection questions offered which help students engage more deeply with the subject matter.
Each page is clearly from the same textbook, and each is given the "Learning Outcomes" at the top box which is one of my favorite features of this text. Additionally, there are often references to other sections of the book which shows that there are common themes and topics throughout. I believe the goal of this text is to help students understand the value in the development or personality and voice in writing, as well as lessons in genre and type; though this was not what I expected when reading the title and synopsis, this consistent theme would be beneficial for college writing students.
Modularity rating: 3
This is the section in which I encountered the main issue I have with this book, and that in some of the pages the structure of the prose and space between text is relatively non-existent, and often close together. The information of the text is helpful and insightful, but some sections are very text-heavy, with very little breaks for the reader. While there are other pages that have images, more breaks, and referential questions and links, this is not consistent throughout each page. Additionally, the numerical breakdown within the sections in the left-hand tool bar was a little confusing when i first began reading through, but if you were able to simply share each page link with students, rather than asking them to navigate the book on their own this shouldn't be an issue. Though the navigation tool took some getting used to, once I got the hang of it navigating the organization of the sections was decent.
The section titles are, however, cleverly titled and would intrigue students, as they both list what the section is about, and restate in a creative way. For example, section 16 "Print or Textual Analysis: What You Read" has several subsections such as "An Author's Choices: What Text Says and How it Says it" and "Editing Focus: Literary Works Live in the Present" that provide insight into the purpose of the section as well as an easy to identify personal purpose.
Organization/Structure/Flow rating: 4
One portion of this text that I admire is that each section begins with a "Learning Outcomes" box, which is written is short, easy to digest prose in bulleted form, and serve very well to provide a preview of what the reader will encounter, to make working through the text more enlightening. In pages that do contain images, they are clear and there do not appear to be any major issues from a technical standpoint. As discussed in the Modularity section of this review, however, I did find navigation with the Contents Toolbar to be a bit perplexing, but I do believe this would not be as much of an issue if this book were in PDF or even print form.
In terms of interface issues, I did not notice any glaring problems. My issues is mainly with modularity and the tool bar, but they worked as they were intended.
The text of these chapters is well written and as I read through the different sections I did not encounter any issues.
I specifically like that this text has sections written by BIPOC authors such as bell hooks, Ta-Nehisi Coates, as well as specific sections on multilingual writers, which is in part why I chose to review this book. Additionally there are sections that explore the use of social media and other virtual forms of communications to make the text relatable to students. These readings, in particular section "1.2 Social Media Trailblazer: Selena Gomez," relate rhetoric specific lessons to individuals and modalities that students will be familiar with, and I believe is in part what helps to "demystify" the university for students.
This text would certainly serve well to provide supplemental readings in a First Year Writing Course, as it offers both textbook style lessons, as well as supplement essays. There are great readings on revising and editing, as well as active reading which I greatly admire. The readings are from a variety of cultural and language specific backgrounds which is increasingly important for any college students and instructor. However, the title of the book is "Writing Guide with Handbook," so I was expecting a lot more writing specific readings. While there are certainly some of those, this text reads more like a compilation of supplementary readings and lessons in writing types/genres, not so much quick referential selections (which is fine by me, but I was a bit confused by the title).
This text would be an excellent part of any curriculum, though perhaps would not be my only textbook choice. The information is valuable and would certainly aid any student in their composition classroom, but as today's students tend to read their work on their phone or tablets, some of the sections which contain only heavy text with very little breaks at times would make navigation difficult. That is not to say that I would not assign this text, in fact I intend to assigned several readings in my next college writing course. But, I do believe that there are some readings that could do well to include more images and breaks between text to make the more text-heavy sections more manageable.

Reviewed by Lisa Kern-Lipscomb, Instructor, Tidewater Community College on 12/30/22
OED offers a free textbook that covers the writing process, vocabulary building, practices for writers, and many instructive lessons. Writing Guide with Handbook is a comprehensive textbook that aligns with my course syllabus throughout the... read more
OED offers a free textbook that covers the writing process, vocabulary building, practices for writers, and many instructive lessons. Writing Guide with Handbook is a comprehensive textbook that aligns with my course syllabus throughout the semester, so students can click a link to take them to valuable learning content.
Content Accuracy rating: 4
Content is readable and accurate without errors.
Relevance/Longevity rating: 4
Guidance formulas for composing both working thesis statements and argumentative thesis statements are relevant writing skills that are beneficial for most students.
Clarity rating: 4
From organizing an essay to integrating documentation to composing an MLA Works Cited page, learning content is engaging while providing clear and concise information.
Consistency rating: 4
While many consistencies exist for each chapter, Editing Focus and Annotated Student Samples are important for composition students. Editing Focus provides novice writers specific learning for challenging writing skills, such as commas and sentence structures. Annotated Student Samples demonstrate annotated models for students to review before starting a writing assignment.
Modularity rating: 4
Chapters are outlined with links to specific, up-to-date content that aligns with my course syllabus, which makes finding learning content easy for students.
Learning content is organized logically, which helps students understand the notion of logical organization, especially novice writers.
Interface rating: 4
While navigating the textbook, all links worked properly, images downloaded, and content viewed correctly.
Grammatical Errors rating: 4
While navigating the book, I did not encounter grammatical errors.
Cultural Relevance rating: 4
Multiple chapters highlight cultural backgrounds and provide engaging activities for students to grasp the understanding of various cultural perspectives.
Writing Guide with Handbook is a textbook I hope my students appreciate as it will not cost them anything. This free textbook is just what I need to help place my students on a successful learning pathway. Thank you OER.
Reviewed by Lisa Whalen, Professor, North Hennepin Community College on 12/7/22
I was thrilled to find this textbook because I've been looking for an OER that covers how to write a narrative, profile, visual evaluation, and rhetorical analysis of argument, and I hadn't seen one anywhere. This one covers each module I teach in... read more
I was thrilled to find this textbook because I've been looking for an OER that covers how to write a narrative, profile, visual evaluation, and rhetorical analysis of argument, and I hadn't seen one anywhere. This one covers each module I teach in first-year writing classes in an engaging format with examples that are much more current and sample essays that are much more relevant to students' lives than the costly textbook I've been using reluctantly for several years.
I didn't see any errors in accuracy. My only complaint about the book is its bias in pushing a specific political angle. I prefer textbooks that are politically neutral or at least politically balanced, but those are nearly impossible to find in recent publications. This one confines most of its political bias to specific sections I can skip fairly easily when using it in my classes.
The examples and societal references are very current and relevant to students' lives. A few, like the section on Selena Gomez, will go out of date quickly, but they're are minimal, and even going out of date won't negate the content associated with them. The other cultural references and example essays are universal enough to be relevant for many years.
Style, word choice, and layout are engaging and accessible. I really like the introduction to rhetoric and key terms at the front. Definitions throughout are concise yet complete. Chapter sections are kept short for readability in an online format.
Concepts introduced in early chapters are applied throughout the later chapters. The whole book builds nicely from beginning to end, and the transitions are seamless.
Yes! Among the things I like best about this book are its logical layout, clear chapter and section headings, and differentiation of genres and skills. The way sections and chapters are set up makes it easy to pick and choose which fit my class and assign them without worrying that skipping around might confuse students.
As stated earlier, the book builds logically from beginning to end while allowing for easy a la cart selection of individual chapters.
It's very easy to navigate. My only criticism is that the PDF page numbers differ from the displayed textbook page numbers. No matter how clearly and often I explain the difference, students get confused by the differing page number designations, especially in classes that are wholly online (versus face-to-face or hybrid). The differing page numbers will cause problems when students want to print pages they are assigned to read. More "digital natives" than I would suspect prefer to print pages they are assigned to read than to read them in an electronic format, and many students aren't aware that printers default to the PDF page numbers.
I didn't notice any grammatical errors or typos.
The book reflects the spectrum of human diversity well.
I'm thrilled to have found this book and plan to use it in my first-year writing sections.
Reviewed by Patricia Jordan, Academic Director, Online Training and Technology, Spartanburg Community College on 9/22/22
There are a lot of great ideas for classroom activities, but it doesn’t really cover the concepts of writing. The handbook portion is better but could be expanded. The table of contents is good. The index is confusing. Word like “Caesar,”... read more
Comprehensiveness rating: 3 see less
There are a lot of great ideas for classroom activities, but it doesn’t really cover the concepts of writing. The handbook portion is better but could be expanded. The table of contents is good. The index is confusing. Word like “Caesar,” “Country Music,” “vulnerability,” and “yearbook” are included, but I am not sure why.
The content seems to be accurate, error-free and unbiased.
Content is up-to-date, but makes use of such pop-culture topics that it feels like it will get out of date very quickly. It isn’t just in sections that would be easy to up date, but seems to be throughout the entire text.
The text is written clearly in an easy-to-understand way.
The text is internally consistent in terms of terminology and framework.
The text is divided into chapters and the chapters into sections. The sections are in easy to read chunks. The sections are hyperlinked.
Organization/Structure/Flow rating: 3
There does seem to be some repetition in the way the chapters are organized. Concepts seem to be repeated. The organization of the handbook is good.
The text seems to be free of significant interface issues. The online version uses Openstax which has a table of contents on the left and text on the right. There are advertisements from Kinetic by OpenStax to purchase a print copy that distracts from reading.
The text does not seem to have any grammatical errors .
The text goes out of its way to be culturally relevant and to include examples that are inclusive of a variety of races, ethnicities, and backgrounds.
It has good information. I think it would be useful to incorporate parts of this into teaching but not use this as a stand alone textbook.
Reviewed by Tara Montague, Part-time instructor, Portland Community College on 7/1/22
This text, Writing Guide with Handbook, is comprehensive. It includes more content than I could cover in one term; I can see using it to cover both a pre-transfer-level course and a basic transfer-level course. Though it is guided by a writing to... read more
This text, Writing Guide with Handbook, is comprehensive. It includes more content than I could cover in one term; I can see using it to cover both a pre-transfer-level course and a basic transfer-level course. Though it is guided by a writing to learn and communicate approach, each chapter includes appropriate writing instruction. The index is thorough and useful; it includes the chapter and section numbers and links to the appropriate content.
The content strikes me as accurate and error-free. This text was a collaborative effort between more than ten authors.
The content is current and engaging; it approaches a variety of relevant social issues and invites the reader to engage with current topics, yet it will certainly remain relevant. The writing models can easily be updated as necessary without changing the overall structure of the text.
The prose is clear and instructive, yet engaging. It doesn’t read like a handbook, and I think students will appreciate that. It is a little less simplistic than other texts I’ve considered from a pre-transfer-level course, but even though some of the concepts and discussions are sophisticated, the commentary provided makes them accessible.
The overall progression from personal narrative to exposition to persuasion includes a loose repetition of structure from chapter to chapter. The framework is coherent and engaging.
The text is completely modular, making it easy to assign small sections. It is well organized, with each chapter broken down into smaller sections, minimizing pages that have multiple screens’ worth of reading.
This text is comprised of twenty chapters that are organized into three larger units; there’s also a brief “handbook” that deals with additional composition elements (e.g. pronouns, MLA documentation, clear and effective sentences) and an Index. Each chapter is divided into eight or so pages or subsections, and the loose repetition of structure between chapters is helpful, but not confining. Each page/section within each chapter has a Learning Outcomes box.
The OpenStax interface makes it easy for users to download the text, view it online, or order a print copy through Amazon.com. The online text is well organized and easy to navigate. As I mentioned above, the Index is impressively functional. The OpenStax interface has a search box that I found useful. The “handbook” is one continuous page and has anchors for navigation, but it is a brief handbook, so this is not a big deal.
I didn’t notice any grammatical errors; the text is clean and well edited.
This text was explicitly designed to provide a culturally responsive and inclusive textbook option; the authors set out to offer “an inviting and inclusive approach to students of all intersectional identities.” The examples of writing are far-ranging and diverse and include writers from history and current writers.
Writing Guide with Handbook stands out because it is organized in a more student-centered way than many introductory composition texts. This text would work well for someone looking to almost ready-to-go course, rather than using a text to supplement their existing course. I am considering using the first half of the text for a pre-transfer-level course; I think it would work well (if not better) for a transfer-level course. I am excited by this text as it really invites users to engage in important issues and explore in writing their relationship to the world around them.
Reviewed by Brenda Coston, Assistant Professor, Honolulu Community College on 2/2/22
The Writing Guide with Handbook, is a text for writers who are beyond the basics of essay structure and who wish to develop more with writing in terms of culture and rhetoric for real life situations. read more
The Writing Guide with Handbook, is a text for writers who are beyond the basics of essay structure and who wish to develop more with writing in terms of culture and rhetoric for real life situations.
The content of the book is truly one of exploration and appreciation for other cultures . Other issues regarding oppression, bias, and objective writing are discussed in terms of how identity is constructed through writing.
This text, hands-down, is on the cutting edge of curranacy and relevance. Exploring hot topics facing society is a great way to engage student writers and get them thinking about the world around them.
Any relevant vocabulary is thoroughly and mindfully explained with examples given. For example, in Chapter 2.3, "Glance at the Issues: Oppression and Reclamation," the term bias and how it affects writing is completley investigated.
Any significant terms are defined before any development of ideas is given. This tactic helps the student to understand throroughly what is being explained in the text.
The authors have done a superb job of organizing ideas and breaking down sections. For instance, in Chapter Two, "Language, Identity, and Culture: Exploring, Employing, Embracing," the main ideas: language, identity, and so on, are broken down in to smaller areas devoted to them and are explored regarding the effects on the writing process.
Topics, are, indeed, presented in a clear manner, beginning with what the writer may already be aware of with writing, such as "The Digital World: Building on What You Already Know to Respond Critically" and moving to "Bridging the Divide Between Personal Identity and Academia."
The book is cearly laid out with photos that enhance the subject matter and provide a clear undernstaning for the reader.
No grammatical errors were noted.
This text makes a point to engage readers from all walks of life with varying cultural backgrounds. By undertsanding how others think, the student has a deeper perspective when writing and produces an essay with substance.
The Handbook, located in the back of the text, is phenomenal. It is more that just grammar. It touches on on proofreading the essay for clear and effective sentences, beneficial transitional expressions, mechanics, point of view, and MLA. The explanations are clear and relevant and very relatable for college students.
Table of Contents
- Chapter 1 The Digital World: Building on What You Already Know to Respond Critically
- Chapter 2 Language, Identity, and Culture: Exploring, Employing, Embracing
- Chapter 3 Literacy Narrative: Building Bridges, Bridging Gaps
- Chapter 4 Memoir or Personal Narrative: Learning Lessons from the Personal
- Chapter 5 Profile: Telling a Rich and Compelling Story
- Chapter 6 Proposal: Writing About Problems and Solutions
- Chapter 7 Evaluation or Review: Would You Recommend It?
- Chapter 8 Analytical Report: Writing from Facts
- Chapter 9 Rhetorical Analysis: Interpreting the Art of Rhetoric
- Chapter 10 Position Argument: Practicing the Art of Rhetoric
- Chapter 11 Reasoning Strategies: Improving Critical Thinking
- Chapter 12 Argumentative Research: Enhancing the Art of Rhetoric with Evidence
- Chapter 13 Research Process: Accessing and Recording Information
- Chapter 14 Annotated Bibliography: Gathering, Evaluating, and Documenting Sources
- Chapter 15 Case Study Profile: What One Person Says About All
- Chapter 16 Print or Textual Analysis: What You Read
- Chapter 17 Image Analysis: What You See
- Chapter 18 Multimodal and Online Writing: Creative Interaction between Text and Image
- Chapter 19 Scripting for the Public Forum: Writing to Speak
- Chapter 20 Portfolio Reflection: Your Growth as a Writer
Ancillary Material
About the book.
Writing Guide with Handbook aligns to the goals, topics, and objectives of many first-year writing and composition courses. It is organized according to relevant genres, and focuses on the writing process, effective writing practices or strategies—including graphic organizers, writing frames, and word banks to support visual learning—and conventions of usage and style. The text includes an editing and documentation handbook, which provides information on grammar and mechanics, common usage errors, and citation styles.
Writing Guide with Handbook breaks down barriers in the field of composition by offering an inviting and inclusive approach to students of all intersectional identities. To meet this goal, the text creates a reciprocal relationship between everyday rhetoric and the evolving world of academia. Writing Guide with Handbook builds on students’ life experiences and their participation in rhetorical communities within the familiar contexts of personal interaction and social media. The text seeks to extend these existing skills by showing students how to construct a variety of compelling compositions in a variety of formats, situations, and contexts.
The authors conceived and developed Writing Guide with Handbook in 2020; its content and learning experiences reflect the instructional, societal, and individual challenges students have faced. The authors invite students and instructors to practice invitational, rather than confrontational, discussions even as they engage in verbal and written argument. Instructors will be empowered to emphasize meaning and voice and to teach empathy as a rhetorical strategy. Students will be empowered to negotiate their identities and their cultures through language as they join us in writing, discovering, learning, and creating.
About the Contributors
Michelle Bachelor Robinson , Spelman College
Dr. Michelle Bachelor Robinson directs the Comprehensive Writing Program and is an assistant professor of writing and rhetoric at Spelman College. For five weeks each summer, she also serves as faculty for the Middlebury College Bread Loaf School of English, a summer residential graduate program for secondary educators. Her research and teaching focus on community engagement, historiography, African American rhetoric and literacy, composition pedagogy and theory, and student and program assessment. She is the coeditor of the Routledge Reader of African American Rhetoric and has published articles in WPA: Writing Program Administration, Peitho: Journal of the Coalition of Feminist Scholars in the History of Rhetoric and Composition, the Alabama Humanities Review, and the Journal of Social Work Education. Her early career was spent as a secondary educator, teaching high school students in the subjects of writing, literature, reading, debate, and drama. Dr. Robinson currently serves as the higher-education cochair of the College Board test development committee for the Advanced Placement (AP) English Language Exam, as well as a member of the test development committee for the College Level Examination Program (CLEP) for College Composition. Dr. Robinson also served on the executive committee for the Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC) from 2017 to 2020 and is still actively involved in that national work.
Maria Jerskey , City University of New York
Dr. Maria Jerskey is a professor of education and language acquisition at the City University of New York (CUNY), where she teaches courses in ESL, linguistics, bilingualism, and French to community college students and academic writing to graduate students. She is the founder and director of the Literacy Brokers Program, which supports and promotes the publishing practices of multilingual scholars. Dr. Jerskey has 4 Preface Access for free at openstax.org. published widely and been involved in national professional committees and organizations that focus on bringing current research and scholarship to bear on institutionalized practices that disenfranchise multilingual writers in order to design and implement equitable teaching and learning practices and professional development. She has authored college writing handbooks, including Globalization: A Reader for Writers and, with Ann Raimes, Keys for Writers, 6th edition. In her teaching and professional committee work, Dr. Jerskey problematizes and challenges the value and status of Standard Written English by applying critical research and scholarship in the fields of education, linguistics, and composition. Her current research and activism focus on identifying institutional barriers to linguistic justice and cultivating sustainable practices that recognize, encourage, and value the use of each person’s full linguistic repertoire.
Toby Fulwiler , Emeritus, University of Vermont
Dr. Toby Fulwiler is an emeritus professor in the Department of English at the University of Vermont. The author of numerous professional texts, student textbooks, chapters, and articles, Dr. Fulwiler graciously provided The Working Writer as inspiration for Writing Guide with Handbook.
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Unlock access to 4 million resources — at no cost to you — with a school-funded subscription., writing handbook -common core.

Description
This Common Core Writing Handbook is a set of interactive flip books that your students will reference all year long. This bundle includes all three text types of common core writing: opinion, informative, and narrative. It defines the text type and gives students reference tools for graphic organizers, writing introduction, transitions, and conclusions. If buying this bundle you save!
You customize your handbook to suit the needs of your class by choosing the pages you include in it.
Each handbook includes:
Text structure student page
Choice of graphic organizers
Choice of writing introductions pages
Choice of opinion statement pages--for opinion only
Choice of writing transitions pages
Choice of writing conclusions pages
Wall posters for text structure
These books are tabbed flip books. If the student wants to write an introduction, for example, he/she flips to the tab that says introduction.
Try my NEW differentiated writing unit on the dwarf planets!
Dwarf Planet Differentiated Writing Unit
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- Description
In this straight-forward series, an easy-to-use modeling format is employed to provide a comprehensive sequence of writing lessons (called mini-lessons). Lessons cover the writing process, different forms of writing, and the traits of effective writing. Each lesson provides a writing sample (model) with analysis (a look at the various elements). Questions to generate content follow as well as two writing assignments based both on the model and the generated content.
The Student Book is a partially consumable handbook that provides the writing models and the writing practice along with an included "handbook" (a reference with specific topics). The mini-lessons are short, focused lessons on these topics.
The Teacher Guide includes reduced copies of the student book. Teacher helps “around the edges” include topic title, lesson objective, guided practice tasks, questions, easy-to-follow instructions, conference and evaluation forms, tips for providing corrective feedback and a special section that further explores the lesson’s featured writing trait.
Note: there are occasional shadow boxes that seem to indicate digital resources. I could find no explanation for what those might be or any way to access them. Teacher guides – 100 pgs (or so), pb; student books 95-160 pgs, pb. ~ Janice

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Informative/Explanatory Writing: On-Demand ©
- Description
The pieces in this On-Demand section represent one of the three types of writing named in the Common Core State Standards for Writing: informative/explanatory writing. Students at all grade levels were given a set of texts (or a short video and a text at younger grades) and a writing prompt that asked them about that set of texts.
Students at kindergarten through grade five were given the focusing question,“What can you do to save water?”
Supplemental Resources
Learn about in common.
Annotated student writing samples illustrate the integration of content understanding and writing in the three types of …

IMAGES
VIDEO
COMMENTS
The Common Core Writing Book, K-5 Lessons for a Range of Tasks, Purposes, and Audiences By Gretchen Owocki, Saginaw Valley State University Gretchen presents a comprehensive framework of strategies that help you choose the best path for meeting students’ needs and the standards.
Product details. Publisher : HOUGHTON MIFFLIN HARCOURT; 1st edition (May 21, 2012) Language : ...
Writing Guide with Handbook breaks down barriers in the field of composition by offering an inviting and inclusive approach to students of all intersectional identities. To meet this goal, the text creates a reciprocal relationship between everyday rhetoric and the evolving world of academia.
The Student Book is a partially consumable handbook that provides the writing models and the writing practice along with an included "handbook" (a reference with specific topics). The mini-lessons are short, focused lessons on these topics. The Teacher Guide includes reduced copies of the student book.
The literature in the texts is a wonderful blend of fiction and nonfiction in every lesson. In grade ...
Common Core State Standards Disclaimer: On this page you can find the Common Core State Standards in Mathematics and English Language Arts. The standards are temporarily located on this page while we work to address technical challenges with CoreStandards.org. Thank you for your patience and we will share an update on CoreStandards.org when we ...
This Common Core Writing Handbook is a set of interactive flip books that your students will reference all year long. This bundle includes all three text types of common core writing: opinion, informative, and narrative. It defines the text type and gives students reference tools for graphic orga...
In this straight-forward series, an easy-to-use modeling format is employed to provide a comprehensive sequence of writing lessons (called mini-lessons). Lessons cover the writing process, different forms of writing, and the traits of effective writing. Each lesson provides a writing sample (model) with analysis (a look at the various elements).
To download Journeys: Common Core Writing Handbook Student Edition Grade 3 eBook, remember to follow the web link below and download the file or gain access to other information which are have conjunction with JOURNEYS: COMMON CORE WRITING HANDBOOK STUDENT EDITION GRADE 3 ebook.
The pieces in this On-Demand section represent one of the three types of writing named in the Common Core State Standards for Writing: informative/explanatory writing. Students at all grade levels were given a set of texts (or a short video and a text at younger grades) and a writing prompt that asked them about that set of texts.