November 5, 2014 9:37 pm
First, why is having more words in a sentence important?
I begin by offering students a calculator. Using a calculator in a writing lesson surprises students, yet they relish using it. (However, because revising verbs and sentence openings often changes the number of words per sentence, this activity should wait until early revising activities are done. Many students will want to do this as soon as they finish their first draft. Restrain them until they have done the harder revising of verbs and sentence openings.)
Next, I ask students to count the number of words in each sentence and to record the number in the margin near the sentence (not within the copy itself or the number will become lost in a well revised essay). I encourage students to write the number with a colored pencil so the number will be easy to find later. Some students think I mean the number of words per line, so I usually count the number of words in the first few sentences with them, watching, so they get the idea. Even then, I point out that I am counting sentences, not the number of words on a line.
After all the words are counted, I ask students to add up the total number of words (that is, to add up all the margin numbers they have just written down). Then they add up the total number of sentences, either by counting the number of first words circled (not such a good idea since those words often change) or by counting the number of numbers in the margin (easy if the numbers are in colored ink).
Now the student uses a calculator to divide the total number of words by the total number of sentences, to find the average (mean) number of words per sentence.
Because little children tend to write little sentences, and adults tend to write longer sentences, I give every student a target number of words per sentence based on grade level. For third graders it is 13; for fourth graders, 14; for fifth graders, 15. I set a target of more than 15 for middle schoolers, and the high teens for high school students and older.
Granted, these numbers are arbitrary. But they are easy for students to remember and they serve the purpose of making students work to increase the number of words per sentence. Rarely do I teach a beginning student who matches the target number in his writing without revising. But with revising, the number always increases.
A few exceptions:
How do children increase the number of words per sentence? We will look at that in the next blog.
Posted by mrskandmrsa
Categories: revising sentence length
Tags: calculating the average number of words in a sentence, counting words in a sentence, revising sentence length, sentence variety
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