Well Esby, I’m not sure if this is the best way, but this is what we tend toward (and this is for elementary/jr. high; high school students do more and varied stuff):
Monday: Child reads their lesson and younger ones (4th-5th grade) dictate a narration to me as I type. Older ones type up their own. It can be from that day or it can encompass the readings since the previous Monday.
Tuesday – Wednesday: With my guidance, child works to elaborate on details, choose ‘best’ words, punctuate correctly, that sort of thing. The 4th/5th graders and I work on this together at the computer, the older ones bring me their paper and we go over it. The younger ones continue to read and give oral narrations throughout the week, the older ones not so much (maybe a failing here). The point of this activity is learning to develop their writing skills in communicating their narration. As such, it is not necessary to have it ‘all’ on paper.
Thursday: Child gives me what they consider to be their final. Again, younger works with me at the computer so this step is sort of skipped with him.
Friday: Final is due.
The following Monday: We start over either with the same subject or a different one. If it is the same, they are free to include some information from what they read and narrated orally the week before.
Another player for us, starting in 7th grade, is this: We are required a certain amount of literature documented. We develop a book list to accomplish this and they must write a 2-4 page (double-spaced, Times font) book report on each book. IDEALLY, they would read a chapter and type up a brief summary. Then at the end of the book (which is about 6 books for a jr. high, 8 for sr.), they would combine their summaries and polish it up. What typically happens around here is that they read the entire book and then try to write a book report from memory. I fussed about it with the first 4 going through but could really find nothing amiss in their reports and so dropped it after I realized I was just being bull-headed 😳 Must be all that oral narration early on! 😉
One thing I have been encouraged to include is an opportunity for the student to select a bunny trail to go down a bit in their narrations, which would lead to more research skills. Maybe next year.
Now that I’ve totally confused you I’ll call it day!
Blessings,
Cindy