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Grades level iconsGrades 7–9
Genre information iconInformational
Resource type iconSparks

The Power of Observation

Dave Eggers
Through a series of short drawing activities, students will explore the ways observable details can have a major impact on their writing.
What Your Students Will Learn

This is a great activity to use at the start of any writing class or unit on narrative. We’re trying to do the following things:

  • Get the students thinking about specificity in their writing
  • Get them thinking about the value of personal observation
  • Get them better acquainted with each other (A bonus!)
  • Get them started on a short story that challenges them to solve fairly sophisticated problems of setting and motive.
What You Will Do

Start with the head of a stuffed crocodile. Or something like that. 826 Valencia is next to a store that sells taxidermied animals, so we usually go over and borrow one of their crocodile heads. Whatever you choose to use, this object should be something fairly unusual, but it should also be something that the students have seen before. Now—without showing the students the object—pass out blank pieces of paper, and ask the students to draw the object. For example, if we have the stuffed crocodile head hidden in my desk, we would tell the students, “You have 5 minutes to draw a perfectly accurate rendering of a Peruvian caiman (a type of small crocodile).” The students will laugh, but you will be serious. They have to get down to business, and draw that crocodile.

Now take the actual crocodile head out, and place it where the students can...

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From This Publication

This book offers 50 creative writing lesson plans from the imaginative and highly acclaimed 826 National writing labs. Created as a resource to reach all students (even those most resistant to creative writing), the off-beat and attention-grabbing lessons include such gems as "Literary Facebooks," where students create a mock Facebook profile based on their favorite literary character, as well as highly practical lessons like the "College Application Essay Boot Camp." These writing lessons are written by experts—and favorite novelists, actors, and other entertainers pitched in too.

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