Kittle’s latest book is PACKED with ideas for how to draw upon micro mentor texts (that is, passages from longer texts) to spur writing, including writing modeled by teachers: “For writing to be rich and real for our students, we must show them how rich and real it is for us” (127).
I started this book with a bit of apprehension after reading a review cautioning teachers that the content isn’t well-suited to high school classrooms. However, while the images in the text appear to show middle-grade students, and while some of the sample mentor texts are indeed geared to this age, the strategies and lessons shared here can be adapted for high school students, perhaps with different mentor texts (Kittle encourages mentor text collection by teachers and students anyway). This book provides a starting point, focusing on a method and a mindset.
Instead of building progressively, chapter by chapter, as much of Kittle’s past work has done, the text reads like a cookbook, with a similar structure for each craft lesson repeated every few pages. As such, the experience of reading this can feel somewhat repetitive at times. However, by reinforcing the same basic structure, Kittle leaves her reader feeling capable and ready to implement these ideas, right now.
4.5