Title: SLAT6827 Second Language Literacy Semester 2, 2003
1SLAT6827 Second Language Literacy Semester 2,
2003
- Lecture slides and notes
- Week 7
- Writing the Written Language
2How does written language differ from spoken
language? (1)
- Writing
- is specific to groups, speaking is universal.
-
- was invented, speaking developed.
-
- is a technology, speaking is a human attribute.
-
- is only 5-6000 years old Humans have been
speaking for hundreds of thousands of years. -
3How does written language differ from spoken
language? (2)
- is typically done in different settings, and
for different purposes than speaking. -
- cannot rely on immediate physical context.
-
- is usually planned.
4 What advantages does written language have over
spoken language?
- Writing has an advantage over speaking in that it
is more permanent more transportable
(historically) more confidential allows
data storage and retrieval (commercial and
government uses) Can you think of
disadvantages?
5Origins in pictures
- Writing developed from pictures
- Pictures gtgtgt graphic representation of objects
- Writing gtgtgt system of visual symbols
representing audible symbols - A drawing initially stands for the sun, latter
associated with the sound of the word sun, later
extended to the word son or the first part of
Sunday.
6From primary to secondary symbolisation
- The movement is from primary to secondary
symbolisation a written symbol is used to
represent an oral symbol of the object. - Example from vanity number plates (GR8FUL, UBYUT)
7History of writing
- Developed in Mesopotamia between 3500-2600 BC
- Spread south to Egypt in 3000BC
- - west to the Indus valley (India
Pakistan)2500BC - - and China (2000 BC)
- By 1500BC the technologically advanced
civilizations had rudimentary writing systems.
8Three types of writing syllabic, logographic,
alphabetic
- Syllabic writing systems are based on
relationship between graphic symbols (graphs) and
spoken syllables. Earliest form of writing,
developed by the Sumerians in cuneiform writing
and Egyptians in the hieroglyphic system.
Syllabic systems can be very regular, and are
best adapted for languages with a limited number
of syllables. - Example Japanese kana or Tamil syllabary
9Japanese syllabary
- ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
- a ka sa ta na ha ma ya
ra wa - ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
- i ki si ti ni hi mi
-- ri wo - ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
- u ku su tsu nu hu mu yu
ru n - ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
- e ke se te ne he me --
re - ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
- o ko so to no ho mo yo ro
10Three types of writing syllabic, logographic,
alphabetic
- Logographic writing systems are based on
relationship between graphic symbols (graphs) and
spoken words (morphemes). Developed from
ideograms and used from an early time (Bronze Age
1700-500 BC) to represent abstract ideas. Useful
for languages where there is much homophony.
Example Chinese characters used in Chinese and
Japanese
11Many characters consist of a radical that
suggests meaning and a phonetic element that can
give pronunciation.
- hachi EIGHT kuchi MOUTH
- ? ? ? fune BOAT
- ? gunkan WARSHIP
- ?? shin MINISTER ? ??
- ?? kan SUPERVISE
- ? ??
- ?? SARA dish kantoku DIRECTOR
12Character scripts
- In Chinese a knowledge of 5000 characters is
needed to read a daily newspaper, up to 30,000 to
read literature. Japanese uses a more restricted
set (about 2000 daily use characters). - Highly productive compounding makes task easier.
- ??? zi xing che
- self moving vehicle bicycle
- Provided a uniform written language in China.
13Three types of writing syllabic, logographic,
alphabetic
- Alphabetic writing systems are based on
relationship between graphic symbols (graphs) and
individual sounds (phonemes). Developed by Greeks
and Romans (600 BC). Close relationship between
sound and spelling (orthography).
14Alphabet languages
- Greek, Spanish, English (26 letters)
- Spanish has a nearly one-to-one mapping between
symbol and sound (grapheme-phoneme) - La ortographia es bastante uniforme.
- The orthography is very uniform.
- English is much less regular e.g., knight versus
bite, or the ough sound in tough, through,
thorough, hiccough.
15The rules that govern writing the Latin alphabet
are
- The direction of writing is from left to right
- There are conventional points of entry and
direction of the strokes that make up the
letters. This determines the movement or ductus
of the letters. - Letters are of different heights and these
heights are constant in relation to each other. - There are two sets of letters capital letters
and small letters. - Letters and words are spaced adequately.
- Are there similar rules for Chinese characters?
16Elements of writing
- What does a writer need to know?
- How to generate script (handwriting, keyboarding)
- Mastery of sentence level lexis and grammar
- Mastery of discourse structure
- Understanding of register
- Understanding of genre
- How does the act of writing differ from the act
of reading?
17Approaches to writing
- Text analytic
- Writing Composing process
- Social construction
18SLAT6827 Week7 last slide