Skip to Main Content

Composition Interventions

Introduction

The below activities use the self-regulated strategy development (SRSD) approach to teach expository organizational structures.  As you read, reflect: How does each acronym help a student understand expository text structures?

Activity A: POW + TREE
If your student is struggling with developing and/or organizing ideas while writing a persuasive or opinion essay or thesis paper, you can teach him POW + TREE. It stands for:

  • Pick My Ideas
  • Organize My Notes
  • Write and Say More
                    +
  • Topic Sentence
  • Reasons
  • Ending/Explain Reasons
  • Examine/Ending

Note: This strategy can be used to teach both narrative and expository organization structures.

POW + TREE in Action
Read the first lesson of POW + TREE below to get a sense of how to teach this strategy by using the SRSD approach. 

POW + TREE

Activity B: POW + TIDE
If your student is struggling with developing and/or organizing ideas while writing an expository essay, you can teach her POW + TREE. It stands for:

  • Pick My Ideas
  • Organize My Notes
  • Write and Say More
                    +
  • Topic Sentence
  • Important Details
  • End

POW + TIDE in Action
Read the first lesson of POW + TIDE below to get a sense of how to teach this strategy by using the SRSD approach.

POW + TIDE

Activity C: STOP + DARE
Another strategy you can use to support your student's persuasive writing is STOP+ DARE. You might choose this strategy if your student struggles with learning how to write a persuasive essay that addresses both sides of an issue. STOP + DARE stands for:

  • Suspend Judgment
  • Take a Side
  • Organize Ideas
  • Plan More as You Write
                    +
  • Develop Your Topic Sentence
  • Add Supporting Details
  • Reject Arguments for the Other Side
  • End with a Conclusion

STOP + DARE in Action
Read the first lesson of STOP + DARE below to get a sense of how to teach this strategy by using the SRSD approach.

STOP + DARE

Activity D: SCAN
Once your student has completed his composition, you can teach him to SCAN. This strategy helps a student review his work and make any necessary additions or changes to his ideas and organization. SCAN stands for:

  • S - Does it make Sense?
  • C - Is it Connected to my belief?
  • A - Can you Add more?
  • N - Note errors?

SCAN in Action
Read the first lesson of SCAN below to get a sense of how to use this SRSD in the classroom.

SCAN

Response to Error: SRSD Strategies

Think about the following scenario, which takes place after a teacher has explicitly taught the POW + TREE strategy and the student has completed the P (Pick My Ideas) step:

Teacher: "How are you going to sequence your ideas, now that you've completed P?"
Student: "I don't know... I could start by saying, My story is about frogs."
Teacher: "Okay, that sounds like it would work at the beginning of your story. What other ideas do you have to sequence?"
Student: "Frogs jump. They can be tadpoles, too. I don't know how to sequence them, though."

In such a case, what might you do?

Feedback During the Lesson

When you are planning your lessons, you should anticipate that your student will make errors throughout. Here are a series of prompts that you can use to respond to errors. Keep in mind that all students are different, and that a given student might respond better to some types of feedback than to others.

Level of Support Description of Scaffold Script
Smallest Scaffold Check your Resources. As you continue to use these interventions, your student should have developed a self-statement list. Remind him to look back to see what to do next. "Use a self-statement to figure out what to do next."
Medium Scaffold Back it Up. If a student is struggling, back up your process. "Okay, let's back up. What step are we on? What self-statement can we use now?"
Highest Scaffold Step by Step. If the student continues to struggle, walk him through each step, providing examples along the way. "Now, we are on O. My self-statement is 'Now I can do O in POW.' Organize my notes. I can write down story part ideas. Now, you try: what is O?"

Strategies to Try After the Lesson

If your student struggles to meet your objective, there are various techniques that you might try in order to adjust the activity so as best to meet your student's needs.

Activity Description of Strategy Script
SRSD Self-Statements. If your student needs support with self-statements, walk through the process with him. Until a student can use these statements independently, he may struggle with SRSD. To support this, first remind the student of the acronym he is using. Then, walk through a piece of the process with the student, using self-statements. "We are using POW + TREE. As we complete each step, we are going to say self-statements to remind ourselves of what to do next."

Now click here to complete your entry ticket in advance of the In-Person session.