Tag Archives: Writing prompts

QuickWrites – 30 Days, 10 Minutes to a More Literate Classroom

QuickWrites are a really easy strategy that gets kids writing and only take about 5 minutes a day! Interested? Read on!

Just as we want our students to become more fluent readers, we also want them to become more fluent writers. QuickWrites are an awesome way to make that happen. A QuickWrite is exactly what you think it is – something a student writes about for only a short amount of time. You give the students a prompt and set a timer. Their goal is to keep their pencil moving the entire time! Even if they are writing the same word over and over, that pencil keeps moving. Because they only write about the topic for one minute, it is more like a game than a long-term commitment. I’ve learned over the years that once students start the pencil, even if they write their name over and over and over again, eventually, the ideas will flow. This strategy will improve students’ ability to write on a topic and awaken their imagination and bring new ideas to their writing!

Because I know that choice is an important motivator for kids (well, for all humans, really….), I give my students one prompt, and one minute. Then, I give them another prompt, and another minute. Finally, I give them a third prompt, and one more minute. Within less than 5 minutes, my students have written something about three different prompts.

This is one of the prompts that I will give my students during our first QuickWrite of the year. (It’s part of my Make Friends with a Book Writing Prompt resource on TPT if you want to grab it.)

After my students work on three different QuickWrites, I ask them to go back and count how many words they wrote for each prompt during the one minute timing. They graph their highest number of words, and that is my writing lesson for the day. Students are free to continue writing on one, or more, of their QuickWrites or work on a writing project of their choosing for the rest of our writing time.

Download a FREE copy of my Writing Fluency Graph here! If you like it, be sure to check out my Student Data Binder resource on TPT for more goal setting, data tracking and student reflecting resources. There are over 110 Student sheets included, so something for everyone!

What I’ve learned is that using QuickWrites about once a week improves students’ ability to put pencil to paper and get the ideas flowing. Also, the QuickWrites are a bank of ideas. If a student gets stuck and can’t come up with an idea for an assignment, one thing I encourage them to do is return to their QuickWrites. Often, they find something there that they can adapt to meet the requirements of the assignment. And since they have already done some writing on that topic, it can feel easier for them to get started.

My QuickWrites resources include the prompts in 4 different formats so that you can use them with lined paper, primary paper, as a prompt that students glue into their journal (which is how I use them) and in a center. Another way to use the writing prompts is for SpeedWriting. This blog post gives you all the details and includes a free download to bring SpeedWriting to your classroom!

Check out Make Friends with a Book and my other Writing Prompts on TPT today and let’s launch a great writing year together! Happy teaching!

14 Great Quotes to Inspire Young Writers – and Make them Laugh!

Funny author quote about writing to inspire kids during writing workshop.  This writing quote is by Mark Twain and includes a cute cartoon lightning bug and lightning.

I love to use quotes in my writing class. Often they make us laugh, and a good giggle can break writer’s block any day! When my students are stuck in a writing rut, I bring out one of these quotes, and it can help ease the tension and the worry. These writing quotes are favorites in my classroom, and they will be in yours as well. Whether you use them as a journal prompt, display them on your classroom wall, or start writing workshop with a laugh, these quotes will remind your students that creativity doesn’t have to be serious—it can be fun, silly, and wonderfully unexpected.

Read on for 14 humorous writing quotes that will make you, and your students, smile! Click to jump to a section, or just enjoy them all.

Funny Quotes to Get Kids Thinking About Editing

These quotes are perfect entry points for a lesson on editing. Project them and use them to start a class discussion or have students reflect on them in their writing journals. These quotes will help students appreciate the beauty in a good edit.

Writing quotes about editing

Writing Quotes about Editing

Writing quotes about editing

Writing Quotes to Help Kids Get Started

Writer’s block is a real problem, and every year I use these quotes to help jolly kids out of their stymied state. You can too!

Writing quotes to help students get started

Writing quotes to help students get started

Writing quotes to help students get started

Writing quotes to help students get started

Writing quotes to help students get started

Writing quotes to help students get started

Writing Quotes About Being a Writer

Use these quotes to help students understand the power and beauty of the written word.

Writing quotes about writers

Writing quotes about writers

Writing quotes about writers

Humorous Quotes About Choosing the Right Word

The English language is strange and difficult. But choosing the right word is half the fun of good writing. These quotes will help your students see rise to meet the challenge.

Writing quotes about choosing the right word

Writing quotes about choosing the right word

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This post was updated on August 13, 2025.