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catalysts for writing
catalysts for writing
You can use this strategy over and over again with personal photos as well as other images you find online, in a magazine, on the wall of your classroom, on the side of a bus. Or click on the Pinterest link that Sam S. found last year: http://www.pinterest.com/reallyrachel/pictures-as-writing-prompts/.
Spend some time studying the picture. List the details you are noticing: colors, textures, juxtapositions. What's outside the frame but still part of the story? Jot down what might have happened before, during, and after the picture was taken. Tell the story of the picture. Here's a picture I love: I took it in Boston Common in November 2013. What stories can it tell?
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AuthorMrs. Paulsen writes, reads, knits and shoots arrows. Archives
November 2015
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