
How to Teach with RAFT Writing: Complete Classroom Guide
By Flip Education Team | Updated April 2026
Creative writing from a specific Role, Audience, Format, Topic
RAFT Writing at a Glance
Duration
25–45 min
Group Size
10–35 students
Space Setup
Standard classroom seating, individual or paired desks
Materials
- RAFT assignment card
- Historical background brief
- Writing paper or notebook
- Sharing protocol instructions
Bloom's Taxonomy
SEL Competencies
Overview
RAFT is a structured writing framework developed by educator Carol Santa in 1988 that uses four variables, Role, Audience, Format, and Topic, to create writing assignments that are simultaneously more authentic and more cognitively demanding than traditional essay prompts. The framework's insight is that the meaning of any piece of writing is determined not just by what it says but by who is saying it, to whom, in what form, and for what purpose. Fixing these four variables creates a specific communicative situation that requires students to think about writing as a social act, not just as the demonstration of knowledge.
The Role dimension, who the student is pretending to be as writer, is what creates the perspective-taking demand that makes RAFT analytically powerful. When a student writes as themselves about the causes of the French Revolution, they can report information. When they write as Marie Antoinette addressing the estates before the Revolution, or as a Parisian breadwinner writing to a local newspaper after the bread riots, they must inhabit a specific perspective with specific knowledge, specific concerns, and specific gaps in understanding. This inhabiting of perspective is intellectually demanding in ways that third-person reporting is not.
The Audience dimension is what makes RAFT writing fundamentally different from school writing. Most school writing has one real audience: the teacher. RAFT writing specifies a fictional but internally consistent audience, a younger student, a skeptical citizen, a future historian, or a regulatory agency, whose characteristics (what they know, what they care about, what they need to understand) shape every decision the writer makes. Students who take the audience dimension seriously must constantly ask: Does my audience know what this term means? Would they be convinced by this argument? What aspect of this topic matters most to them?
The Format dimension, the specific form the writing will take, is where RAFT creates genre-specific learning alongside content learning. A persuasive editorial is not the same as a scientific abstract, which is not the same as a narrative account, which is not the same as a speech. Each format has conventions, structural features, and rhetorical demands that are worth learning in their own right. RAFT creates authentic contexts for practicing these different forms of writing: students write persuasively because the situation calls for persuasion, not because the teacher has assigned a persuasive essay.
The most sophisticated RAFT assignments create tension between the role and the topic that forces students to engage with the content from an angle they wouldn't have chosen for themselves. A student assigned to write as a climate scientist addressing petroleum industry executives must understand both the science and the specific challenges of communicating that science to an audience with financial interests in dismissing it. This tension, between what the writer knows and what the audience needs, is where the deepest thinking about content happens.
Assessment of RAFT writing should be three-dimensional: How accurately does the writer represent the content? How consistently do they maintain the role and address the actual audience? How well does the writing fulfill the requirements of the format? These three dimensions, content, perspective, and genre, reflect the three intellectual tasks the assignment was designed to develop, and collapsing them into a single grade misses what makes RAFT more demanding than conventional writing assignments.
What Is It?
What is RAFT Writing?
RAFT Writing is a versatile literacy strategy that improves student comprehension and creative expression by requiring writers to consider four distinct components: Role, Audience, Format, and Topic. By shifting the perspective away from the traditional student-to-teacher writing dynamic, RAFT forces students to process information deeply and demonstrate conceptual understanding through varied viewpoints. This methodology works because it leverages the cognitive load of perspective-taking to move students beyond rote memorization into higher-order thinking. When students must write as a 'Carbon Atom' (Role) to 'Future Generations' (Audience) in the form of a 'Time Capsule Letter' (Format) about 'Global Warming' (Topic), they must synthesize complex scientific data into a coherent narrative. This authentic engagement increases motivation and provides a clear framework for structured writing across all disciplines, particularly in science and social studies where abstract concepts can be humanized through persona-based writing. It serves as a powerful tool for differentiated instruction, allowing teachers to assign roles of varying complexity based on student readiness while maintaining the same core learning objectives.
Ideal for
Steps
How to Run RAFT Writing: Step-by-Step
Define the Learning Objective
Identify the specific content knowledge or skill you want students to demonstrate through their writing.
Brainstorm RAFT Components
Create a list of potential Roles (e.g., historical figures, elements), Audiences (e.g., a jury, a younger sibling), Formats (e.g., diary entry, protest song), and Topics.
Construct the RAFT Grid
Organize your brainstormed ideas into a 4-column table, providing several rows of pre-set combinations or 'mix-and-match' options.
Model the Strategy
Show students a completed RAFT example and think aloud as you write a short paragraph to demonstrate how the Role influences the tone and vocabulary.
Set Clear Constraints
Provide a rubric that outlines expectations for content accuracy, adherence to the chosen format, and the use of specific academic vocabulary.
Facilitate Writing and Peer Review
Allow students time to draft their pieces, then have them share with peers who can provide feedback based on whether the 'voice' matches the assigned Role.
Pitfalls
Common RAFT Writing Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
Role and audience combinations that don't create genuine tension
When a student writes as a scientist to another scientist, they don't have to think about adjusting language, expertise assumptions, or persuasive strategy. The most powerful RAFT assignments create tension between what the role knows and what the audience needs: a scientist writing to a worried parent, a character explaining their actions to a judge.
Format requirements that overshadow content
When students are so focused on making a 'proper letter' or 'real newspaper article' that they forget the content, the format has swallowed the purpose. Establish that the format should serve the content, not the other way around. Assess the quality of the argument or explanation first.
Too many options causing decision paralysis
Providing 6 different RAFT combinations can paralyze students who struggle with choice. Limit to 2-3 options for most classes, and for students who need structure, assign the role and let them choose only the format.
Students who pick the easiest combination
Students will choose the option that requires the least cognitive effort if all options appear equally valid. Design RAFT combinations so all choices are genuinely challenging, or structure the choice so that any combination requires equal depth of content engagement.
No peer audience for the writing
RAFT writing is designed for a specific audience. If students write only for the teacher, they ignore the audience dimension entirely. Have students share their writing with a partner playing the audience role who responds in character: a peer playing the 'worried parent' responds to the 'scientist letter.'
Examples
Real Classroom Examples of RAFT Writing
A Day in the Life: Ancient Egypt (Grade 7)
Students in a 7th-grade Social Studies class studying Ancient Egypt are assigned a RAFT. Their Role is a scribe living in Thebes, their Audience is a younger sibling curious about their work, the Format is a journal entry, and the Topic is describing a typical day of record-keeping and temple duties. Students must integrate at least five specific vocabulary words from the unit, such as 'papyrus,' 'hieroglyphics,' 'pharaoh,' and 'vizier,' into their entries. This activity encourages students to synthesize information about daily life, social structure, and religious practices from a personal viewpoint.
Character's Plea: 'To Kill a Mockingbird' (Grade 9)
After reading 'To Kill a Mockingbird,' 9th-grade ELA students engage in a RAFT activity. Their Role is a minor character (e.g., Mayella Ewell, Boo Radley, Mrs. Dubose), their Audience is Atticus Finch after the trial, the Format is a persuasive letter, and the Topic is expressing their true feelings or untold story related to the events of the novel. Students must use evidence from the text to support their character's perspective and emotional state, demonstrating a deep understanding of character motivation, theme, and narrative perspective.
Journey of a Water Molecule (Grade 6)
For a 6th-grade Science unit on the water cycle, students adopt the Role of a single water molecule. Their Audience is a curious cloud, the Format is a travelogue or diary, and the Topic is describing their journey through the various stages of the water cycle (evaporation, condensation, precipitation, collection). Students must accurately use scientific terminology like 'transpiration,' 'sublimation,' and 'runoff' to explain their experiences, illustrating their understanding of the scientific processes in a creative and engaging narrative.
Local Council Debate: Community Issue (Grade 11)
In an 11th-grade Civics class discussing local government, students are assigned a RAFT to prepare for a mock town council meeting. Their Role is a specific community stakeholder (e.g., small business owner, environmental activist, retired citizen, young parent), their Audience is the local town council, the Format is a formal speech or presentation, and the Topic is advocating for or against a proposed community initiative (e.g., building a new park, increasing property taxes, regulating a local business). Students must research the issue, develop a reasoned argument from their stakeholder's perspective, and consider the potential impact on their community.
Research
Research Evidence for RAFT Writing
Knipper, K. J., & Duggan, T. J.
2006 · The Reading Teacher, 59(5), 462-470
The RAFT strategy effectively integrates reading and writing by providing students with a structured framework to process and articulate content-area concepts.
Klein, P. D., & Boscolo, P.
2016 · Journal of Writing Research, 7(3), 311-350
Writing tasks that specify distinct rhetorical roles and audiences facilitate the cognitive shift from basic knowledge-telling to deeper knowledge-transforming.
Flip Helps
How Flip Education Helps
Printable RAFT combination cards and format examples
Flip generates printable RAFT cards that assign students a Role, Audience, Format, and Topic, along with format examples to guide their writing. These materials provide a creative structure for exploring curriculum content from different perspectives. Everything is ready to print and distribute.
Standards-based writing tasks for any subject
The AI creates RAFT combinations that are directly mapped to your curriculum standards and lesson topic, ensuring the writing task is academically purposeful. The activity is designed for a single session, allowing students to demonstrate their understanding through a specific lens. This alignment keeps the focus on your learning goals.
Facilitation script and numbered writing steps
Follow the generated script to brief students on the RAFT process and use numbered action steps to manage the writing and sharing phases. The plan includes teacher tips for encouraging creative expression while maintaining academic rigor and intervention tips for students who struggle with their assigned role. This guide ensures a structured environment.
Reflection debrief and exit tickets for assessment
Wrap up the activity with debrief questions that ask students to reflect on how their assigned role influenced their perspective on the topic. A printable exit ticket is included to assess individual understanding of the core concepts. The generation ends with a bridge to your next curriculum objective.
Checklist
Tools and Materials Checklist for RAFT Writing
Resources
Classroom Resources for RAFT Writing
Free printable resources designed for RAFT Writing. Download, print, and use in your classroom.
RAFT Writing Planning Sheet
Students plan their writing by defining their Role, Audience, Format, and Topic before they begin drafting.
Download PDFRAFT Writing Reflection
Students reflect on how adopting a specific role, audience, format, and topic influenced their writing and thinking.
Download PDFRAFT Writing Workshop Roles
Assign roles for peer review of RAFT writing so feedback targets the unique demands of the strategy.
Download PDFRAFT Writing Prompt Bank
Ready-to-use RAFT combinations and supporting prompts organized by subject area.
Download PDFSEL Focus: Social Awareness
A card focused on perspective-taking through writing in character as someone with a different viewpoint or experience.
Download PDFTemplates
Templates that work with RAFT Writing
ELA
An English Language Arts template structured around reading, writing, speaking, and language skills, with sections for text selection, close reading, discussion, and written response.
unit plannerELA Unit
Plan an English Language Arts unit that integrates reading, writing, speaking, and language, organized around anchor texts and an essential question that gives the unit coherence and purpose.
rubricELA Rubric
Build an ELA rubric for writing, reading analysis, or discussion, with criteria for ideas, evidence, organization, style, and conventions calibrated to your specific task type and grade level.
curriculum mapELA Map
Map your English Language Arts curriculum for the year, organizing reading units, writing genres, and speaking/listening experiences across the calendar while ensuring balanced attention to all literacy strands.
Topics
Topics That Work Well With RAFT Writing
Browse curriculum topics where RAFT Writing is a suggested active learning strategy.
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions About RAFT Writing
What is RAFT Writing and how does it work?
How do I use RAFT Writing in my classroom?
What are the benefits of RAFT Writing for students?
How can I differentiate RAFT assignments for diverse learners?
Generate a Mission with RAFT Writing
Use Flip Education to create a complete RAFT Writing lesson plan, aligned to your curriculum and ready to use in class.












