Title: theory
1Extensive Writing Online
Richard S. Lavin FESSPUK
2Problems with first year tertiary English
- Few classes with one teacher insufficient
contact with English - Emphasis on reading, grammar, vocabulary in high
school.
3Solution
- Speaking in class
- Writing outside of class
4What kind of writing?
- Things students are interested in
- Emphasis on fluency
- Quantity
5Quantity
- reading comprehension is predicted far
morepowerfully by variables associated with the
amount of reading that students engage in and
their opportunities to read
Cummins, J. (2000). Academic language learning,
transformative pedagogy, and information
technology towards a critical balance. TESOL
Quarterly, 34(3), 537-48.
6- grammatical aspects of students writing seemto
improve more from regular practice than they do
as a result of having errors corrected
Truscott, J. (1996). The case against grammar
correction in L2 writing classes. Language
Learning, 46, 327-69.
7Online is best!
- Archiving
- Countable
- Analyzable
- Access any time
- More sociable
- CMC encourages greater volume
8CMC gt greater volume
perhaps the most remarkable and appealing
features of LANs are the high volume of writing
by students and their great degree of
participation
Braine, G., Yorozu, M. (1998). Local area
network (LAN) computers in ESL and EFL writing
classes. JALT Journal, 20(2), 47-59.
9Classroom dynamic
- the instructor played less of a role in
Web-based BB discussions than the students did
whereas in face-to-face discussions
contributions were distributed evenly between
the instructor and the students - Kamhi-Stein, L. D. (2000). Looking to the future
of TESOL teacher education Web-based bulletin
board discussions in a methods course. TESOL
Quarterly, 34(3), 423-55.
10- Shy students who usually do not participate in
class discussion expressed opinions elaborately
in online discussions, and greater participation
was witnessed
Shibuya, A. (2002). Utilizing eGroup for Japanese
students. The Language Teacher, 26(3), 21-22.
11Extensive Writing
- Similar to ER
- Quantity
- Enjoyment
- Different from ER
- Social
12Media
- Chat
- Email
- Mailing lists (Email groups)
- BBS
- Weblogs
- WikiWiki
13Dimensions
- Asynchronicity
- Many-to-many
- Pull
14BBS criteria
- Cost
- Ease of setup
- Hosting
- Interface
- getting started
- daily (unsupervised) use
15- Blackboard
- www.blackboard.com
- WebCT
- www.webct.com
- The Forum Company
- www.forumco.com
- StereoDreamScene
- www.stereodreamscene.co.uk
- Ezboard
- www.ezboard.com
16Favourable Effects
- Writing quantity
- Enjoyment
- Class atmosphere
- Computer literacy
17Ezboard features
- Appearance
- Counting contributions
- Custom titles
18Variations
- Integrated vs. Non-integrated
19Implementation
- QCCs
- Reply to student 1.5
- Message in integrated forum 2
20Implementation
- Ezboard index
- l 2m t1 t2
- t1 title (converted to numeric value) after 1
month
21(No Transcript)
22Security
23Interface
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28Push/Pull
29Convergence
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32Disadvantage
- Limited hierarchy (threading)
- Community gt Forum gt Topic
- Topics contain original message and replies, but
no replies to replies.
33Issues
- Balanced curriculum
- Improvement in quality?
- Reinforcement of errors
34ER vs EW
- ER program more effective than frequent writing
program at improving students' writing
Tsang, W.-K. (1996). Comparing the effects of
reading and writing on writing performance.
Applied Linguistics, 17(2), 208-33.
35Waring
EW
ER
?
Nation
36On output
- in producing an L2, learners will on occasion
become aware of (i.e. notice) a linguistic
problem. Noticing a problem can 'push' learners
to modify their output. In doing so, learners may
sometimes be forced into a more syntactic
processing mode than might occur in
comprehension. Thus, output sets 'noticing' in
train, triggering mental processes that lead to
modified output. What goes on between the
original output and its reprocessed form, it is
suggested, is part of the process of second
language learning.
Problems in Output and the Cognitive Processes
They Generate A Step Towards Second Language
Learning MERRILL SWAIN and SHARON
LAPKIN Applied Linguistics, Volume 16, Issue 3
(1995)
37erroneous output may be evidence that a
learner has made a hypothesis about the language
being learned and is testing it out
Corder, S. P. (1981). Error analysis and
interlanguage. Oxford Oxford University Press.
38- In speech comprehension, the interactive and
compensatory nature of the human comprehension
system can both promote comprehension and hinder
language development for second language
learners... the processes of grammatical encoding
during production and monitoring to check the
matching of the communicative intention and the
output enable language learners to assess the
possibilities and limitations of their
interlanguage capability. This may, under certain
conditions, serve as an internal priming device
for consciousness raising for the learners, which
in turn creates an optimal condition for language
learning to take place.
Comprehension and Production Processes in Second
Language Learning In Search of the
Psycholinguistic Rationale of the Output
Hypothesis Shinichi Izumi Applied Linguistics
Volume 24, Issue 2, 2003 pp. 168-196
39- students writing English summaries of books they
read in an ER program scored better on cloze
tests than students receiving instruction on
cloze tests and than students writing summaries
in Japanese
Mason, B., Krashen, S. D. (1997). Extensive
reading in English as a foreign language. System,
25(1), 91-102.
EW is necessary to realise the full benefits of
the learning resulting from ER.
40- Reading, then, if it is to represent engaged and
meaning-making activity, must allow for the ways
in which readers contribute to and make
connections with the text. Writing provides a
unique opportunity for discovering and exploring
these contributions and connections, for it
allows the reader to dialogue with a text and
find a particular way into it.
Zamel, V. (1992). Writing one's way into reading.
TESOL Quarterly, 26(3), 463-85.
41- with first language classrooms, writing plays a
central role in the learning process, but not so
much with second language learning (at least in
modern communicative approaches). With second
language learning, research tends to focus on how
learners learn to write in the second language,
rather than how they learn the second language
through writing. Similarly, in first language
classrooms, researchers learn about children's
learning processes through their writing, whereas
this window into learning processes tends to be
closed to a large extent with second language
learners.
Harklau, L. (2002). The role of writing in
classroom second language acquisition. Journal of
Second Language Writing, 11(4), 329-50.
42Questions
- QQCs whats appropriate?
- What percentage of the curriculum should be
devoted to fluency-focused writing? - Journal writing online or on paper?
- How to handle accuracy-focused writing?