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St Francis Canossian Primary School

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Title: St Francis Canossian Primary School


1
St Francis Canossian Primary School
Putting thoughts on paper the what, how and
why in Process Writing
2006 -2008
2
You might think
  • With good-looking kids with blue-barrette
    pony tails, affluent parents who could afford to
    have their children tutored if they couldnt
    catch up in school, what else needs to be done?

3
School background
  • A well-established primary school
  • An all-girls school
  • Students are not, on the whole, fluent and
    confident English language speakers and writers
  • In writing, most of them show a heavy reliance on
    prescribed questions
  • Students have not much room for self-expression.

4
Looking into the routines
  • Lessons followed the typical pattern -
    teacher-led introduction to the topic including
    vocabulary and grammatical structures needed to
    complete the task
  • Students wrote their compositions within a time
    limit and passed them to the teachers for
    correction and comments

5
  • Questions were provided, which meant that
    students were very restricted in terms of
    possible responses to the task (in fact, many of
    the students compositions produced from these
    outputs were extremely similar to one another
    penmanship?)
  • Focus on students products as displays of
    language rather than on the process of writing in
    teaching

6
What that leads to is
  • students withholding personal views as they
    very much want to write accurately the language
    rather than spending time on ideas development

7
And what this might lead to further is
  • affect students motivation to write because of
    the limited strategies

What we believe is
  • Teachers can work actively to improve students
    motivation provided there are ways
  • (Dornyei, 2001, 2003)

8
The beginning
9
  • Some considerations
  • External factors
  • Socio-cultural and contextual background of the
    learners
  • Internal factors
  • Individual learners - learners attitude towards
    the activities, its intrinsic interests, and the
    value and relevance of the activities

10
  • Noels (2001)
  • Three psychological needs to be met in order to
    enhance motivation
  • 1. Sense of competency achieved through seeking
    out and overcoming challenges
  • 2. Autonomy
  • 3. Relatedness - being connected to and esteemed
    by others belonging to a larger social whole

11
The new approach involves
  • Make strong connections between writing and the
    students own experiences, while encouraging
    sharing between teacher and students and among
    the students themselves
  • introducing and exploring it with the students
    through class discussion and through sharing
    their own ideas
  • Help them get a sense that this was a
    collaborative endeavor
  • Technically, forming sentences, paragraphing,
    grouping and sequencing original ideas a step
    by step process

12
Some necessary details
  • Main participants
  • 4 classes of P3
  • 4 classes of P4
  • Aged between 8-9 yrs
  • Time spanned over one and a half years
  • The writing lessons are planned according to
    modules, taking into consideration of the text
    types learned or to be learned

13
  • Student interviews were conducted in Cantonese,
    these ranged from about 15-20 minutes each
  • The interviews focused on students feelings
    about writing in general and their perceptions
    and preferences regarding the topics and
    procedures used during the course of writing

14
Before going deeper, here is a reminder
  • This sharing session is NOT intended to be very
    instructional
  • Instead, we will explore the writing process and
    its essentials, which hopefully, you could apply
    to any writing courses

15
Lets look at the plan this morning
  • the what, how and why in process writing
  • the importance of feedback
  • students voice
  • looking at students work
  • development of students writing between
    2006-2008
  • implications and conclusions

16
A light dose of literature here
Process writing what, how, why
17
The changing roles of teacher and students
  • The teacher needs to move away from being a
    marker to a reader, responding to the content of
    student writing more than the form.

18
  • Research also shows that
  • feedback is more useful between drafts, not
    when it is done at the end of the task after the
    students hand in their composition to be marked.
  • Corrections written on compositions returned to
    the student after the process has finished seem
    to do little to improve student writing.

19
  • Students also need to realize what they put down
    on paper can be changed Things can be deleted,
    added, restructured, reorganized, etc.
  • They need to develop the habit of self-evaluation
    on what they have written.

20
  • Four main stages in process writing
  • Pre-writing and brainstorming
  • Drafting and Focusing ideas
  • Revising and editing
  • Publishing and sharing

21
  • Pre-writing and brainstorming

22
  • St Francis teachers invited students to respond
    to their feedback. This practice ensures that the
    feedback is received by the student, and that it
    is attended to, and that is acted on. This
    practice helps to promote interaction between
    students and teachers and enhance the feedback
    process.

23
  • Pre-writing and brainstorming
  • Elicits ideas from students instead of
    teacher doing all the talking
  • The teacher needs to stimulate students'
    creativity, to get them think how to approach a
    writing topic. In this stage, the most important
    thing is the flow of ideas.

24
  • Drafting and focusing ideas
  • On completion of mind mapping exercises,
    students write their first draft.
  • Guidance and help are necessary in this stage.
  • Students are reassured that the first draft
    will not be perfect.

25
  • During this stage, students write without much
    attention to the accuracy of their work or the
    organization. The most important feature is
    meaning. Here, the teacher (or other students)
    should concentrate on the content of the writing.
  • Students ask themselves Is it coherent? Is there
    anything missing? Anything extra?

26
Peer edited draft
Final draft for teacher Comment
27
(No Transcript)
28
  • Revising and editing
  • It is the significant step that helps
    students reshape their writing. Students can
    correct any mistakes they might have made on such
    technical aspects as grammar, spelling and
    punctuation. They can change some of the ideas in
    their writings. This can be achieved through
    self-editing, peer editing and teacher editing.

Therefore, students need to realize that what
they write initially does not necessarily have to
be the final product, but that the form and
content can be modified and improved as they go
along.
29
  • Publishing and sharing
  • At the end of the process, students produce the
  • final draft.
  • Opportunities are created for students to share
    their
  • final products with their classmates.

30
Feedback that supports learning
  • Students receive feedback from their peers and
    teacher during group discussion.
  • The initial feedback and discussion focuses on
    ideas rather than on marks and is provided at a
    time when the ideas are still fresh in students
    minds.
  • Lag-time in marking is avoided.

31
Feedback that supports learning
  • Seeing and critiquing others work heightens
    students awareness of standards and helps
    develop their ability to evaluate their own work.
  • Student also gained feedback from a wider range
    of perspectives than just from a teacher,
    allowing them to have a deeper reflection on
    their on-going writing. They are able to monitor
    the quality of their own work when they have
    critiqued the work of others.

32
Feedback that supports learning
  • During the process, we also found that teacher
    feedback may not necessarily help students learn
    better or produce better work students do not
    often treat teacher feedback seriously and no
    actions for improvement are taken. Some students
    do not understand the feedback they receive.
    However, they seldom initiate to talk to their
    teachers about this.

33
Feedback that supports learning
  • Oral assessment in the form of class
    presentations makes students work public.
    Hearing others work helps students develop a
    sense of standards that should apply to their own
    work.

34
There should be a balance between process writing
(developing composition skills) and independent
writing (e.g. journal writing) in your
school-based curriculum planning!
35
The Journal Writing of St Francis Canossian
students from 2006-2008
Im a Little writer!
36
Im a Little writer!
  • Through Little writer children have the
    opportunity to explore learning, feelings,
    experiences and language.

37
Journal writing
  • Recent research shows that journal writing allows
    students to express individual thoughts and
    ideas to experiment with language for a reason
    and in a purposeful manner and to develop
    critical and creative thinking skills.

38
Journal writing
  • However, the way teachers respond to students'
    writing can have a powerful influence on their
    students' writing development.
  • When teachers and students emphasize the
    importance of writing mechanics, such as correct
    spelling, capitalization, punctuation, grammar,
    writing can be inhibited.

39
Journal writing
  • Teachers should make a special effort to be
    encouraging of all student journal entries and
    should avoid vague one-word responses such as
    "great" one or two pointed sentences is more
    effective.

40
Journal writing
  • In evaluating the program teachers need to
    determine whether their journal writing programs
    have met their instructional goals, and they also
    need to consider what students think about
    journal writing.

41
Here is a framework for exploring the possibility
of including a journal writing program in primary
school curriculum
  • consider the rationale for the use of journal
    writing
  • consider learning goals and objectives that may
    be met through the use of journal writing
  • consider procedures for establishing and
    maintaining a dynamic journal writing program
  • consider how student growth can be assessed in
    journal writing and
  • consider how the effectiveness of journal writing
    can be evaluated.

42
The writing development of St Francis Canossian
students from 2006-2008
43
  • These young writers made spontaneous and quite
    strenuous attempts to relate all writing topics
    to their past and future life experiences
  • Another positive features of the students
    reaction to the new writing approach was that
    they saw more opportunities to voice their own
    thoughts and feelings

44
Potential problems
  • necessary to provide a supportive environment
    for the students
  • be patient
  • the activities are varied and the objectives
    clear, then they will usually accept doing so
  • in the long term, you and your students will
    start to recognise the value of a process writing
    approach as their written work improves
  • Process writing can lead to learner
  • frustration because learners need to
  • rework on the same material
  • spend more time on writing in class

45
Implications and conclusions
  • This presentation reports on a small-scale study
    in one schools context, lasting for a period of
    only 1.5 years
  • Further study might examine student writing
    development over a greater period of time and a
    variety of different contexts
  • An ethnographic study for a longer period of time
    could uncover richer details and reveal the
    subtleties of change among students at deeper
    levels

46
  • Further Reading
  • Hedge T. 1988. Writing. Oxford University Press.
  • Krashen SD. Writing Research, theory and
    applications. Pergamon Press.
  • Kroll B. 1990. Second Language Writing Research
    insights for the classroom. Cambridge University
    Press.
  • Raimes A. 1983. Techniques in teaching writing.
  • Oxford University Press.
  • White R V Arndt. 1991. Process Writing Longman.
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