Dialogue Journal
Teaching Resources
Definition
A Dialogue Journal is a double-entry notebook used as a
form of communication between two people, either teacher-student
or student-student. It involves all students in a literacy
practice that incorporates both meaningful reading and writing
all entries are private, informal messages or conversation between
the two participants. After each entry, the journal is exchanged.
Guidelines
- Composition notebooks make the best Dialogue Journals.
- The student writes an entry based on his/her own reflections or the teacher
can provide a prompt.
- The partner comments on the entry, expanding the topic or asking questions.
- The journal is passed back to the original writer, who responds to the
partner’s message and adds additional comments. At this time, the student
may also add new thoughts.
- This procedure continues for as long as there is interest and time allows.
- Journal entries can be any length, even one or two sentences, depending
on ability level.
- Encourage students to spell as best they can, but this is not the place to
correct student work. However, respond in ways that show the correct
grammatical and spelling conventions.
- Journals can be exchanged daily or weekly, as can partners.