Title: SLAT6827 Second Language Literacy Semester 2, 2003
1SLAT6827 Second Language Literacy Semester 2,
2003
- Lecture slides and notes
- Week 8
- Teaching writing
2Differences between teaching spoken and written
discourse
- Permanence
- Explicitness
- Density
- Detachment
- Organisation
- Slowness of production, speed of reception
- Standard language
- A learnt skill
- Sheer amount and importance
3Differences between teaching spoken and written
discourse (1)
- Permanence
- - writing is fixed and stable, reader control
- Explicitness
- - context and reference made clear
- Density
- - less redundancy in written language
4Differences between teaching spoken and written
discourse (2)
- Detachment
- - writing detached in time and space
- Organisation
- - careful formulation of structure
- Slowness of production, speed of reception
5Differences between teaching spoken and written
discourse (3)
- Standard language
- - writing uses highly conventionalised forms
- A learnt skill
- - writing is deliberately taught and learned
- Sheer amount and importance
- - which is more important?
6Writing as a means or an end
- Writing to learn about the language or a topic
- Writing to improve writing.
- Writing to do both.
7Writing for content and form
- Balancing the need to communicate ideas
information and mastering the conventional forms
required.
8Writing and composition
- What is the difference between writing and
composition?
9Writing and ideology
- Recent research in teaching writing show evidence
of approaches that favor diversity and
complexity rather than idealizations and simple
solutions, favors negotiation and inquiry rather
than transmission models of teaching, and values
what students can do rather than what we perceive
as their deficits. (Raimes 1998, p142)
10Is writing a process or product?
Product approach Emphasis placed on the final
product. Attention given to the provision of, and
practice with models.
Process approach Emphasis on the processes of
writing. Attention given to planning, drafting
revising and the development of learner
expression in writing
11The effect of L1 language and culture
contrastive rhetoric
- Contrastive rhetoric Identifying patterns of
learners L1 and based on these patterns
recommending teaching practices based on
initiating students into the target culture
rhetorical patterns. - ...literature about the cultural norms and
expectations that students bring to their
writing in English leads to a deterministic
stance and deficit orientation as to what
students can accomplish in English and what their
writing instruction should be (Raimes, 1998
p143)
12Recent research issues
- Instructional settings
- Should L1 and L2 writers be separate?
- Curriculum EAP
- Is academic literacy neutral, value-free and
nonexclusionary? - Content and genres
- Should the student select?
13Instructional activities
- What do we teach?
- 1. Generating ideas in journals.
- 2. Connecting writing and other language skills.
- 3. Collaborating in peer groups.
- 4. Responding to writing. (Ur, pp170-171)
- 5. Revising.
- 6. Teaching with technology.