Title: The Writing Center and NonNative Speakers of English
1The Writing Center and Non-Native Speakers of
English
- Amy Spencer
- Director of the Academic Resource Center
- Ohio Dominican University
Ohio Writing Center Consortium February 16, 2007
2Q 1
What is the cultural / linguistic background of
your students?
3Q 2
- What frustrates you in your interactions w/ESOL
writers? - What are you seeing that you find difficult to
deal with?
4Overview
- Challenges
- Cultural
- Linguistic
- Appropriate Responses
5Cultural
- Expectations of education
- Structure
- Teacher authority
- Understanding of time
- Monochronic
- Polychronic
- Student passively agreeable
- Well educated person quotes masters
- Rhetorical Patterns
- Usual culprit
6Cultural Rhetorical Patterns
- English
- Linear
- Semitic
- Parallel
- Oriental
- Indirect
- Romance
- Digressive
7English
- Linear
- Clearly stated thesis
- Developed step-by-step
- Topic sentence
- Support
- Support
- Periodic Reminders of the thesis
- Primarily uni-directional
8Semitic
- Parallel structure
- Redundant
- Wordy
- Takes too long to get to the point
9Parallel construction in Hebrew
- Give until the Lord,
- O ye sons of the mighty,
- Give unto the Lord
- glory and strength
10Oriental
Indirect
Confucius says..
11 Romance Russian
Digression Extraneous material
Plus entirely different sentence structure
12- American Traffic Law as Compared with Traffic law
in Switzerland - At first glance the traffic law in United States
appeared to me simpler than in Switzerland. - The American towns in general have the
disposition of a cross, and for a driver who
knows how to situate himself between the four
cardinal points, there is no problem to find his
way. Each street has numbers going crescendo from
the center of the town to the outside. - There are many accidents in Switzerland, as
everywhere else, and the average of mortality
comparatively to the proportion of the countries
is not better than in the United States. We have
the problem of straight streets, not enough
surveillance by policemen on the national roads,
and alcohol. The country of delicious wines has
made too many damages. (Kaplan, 19)
13Linguistic? Or Cultural?
- Most of what were calling linguistic errors are
culturally based - Cultural
- Disorganized / Rambling
- Repetitive
- Unoriginal/plagiarized
- Linguistic
- Grammatical errors
14Appropriate Responses
- 1 Do not assume shared expectations
- you are probably not starting on the same page
- Dont rely on tried and true methods that you
use with native speakers of English
15MisMatch!
- Because collaborative techniques depend so
heavily on shared basic assumptions or patterns,
conferences that attempt merely to take the
techniques we use with native-speaking writers
and apply them to ESL writers may fail to assist
the writers we intend to help (Powers 370).
16Uncomfortable!
- More intervention than considered appropriate
with native-speaking writers - Informant rather than collaborator
- Stay with student when possible
- Learn culture if possible
- Avoid assumptions of common ground
17New Approach
- Traditional conferencing strategies
- Share 5-paragraph background
- Read out loud to hear correct the problem
- Assumes a native ear
- For ESL student, shift to
- Analyze assignments to see exactly what is
expected - Think aloud composing
- Model process
18Information Gathering
- Explicit guidelines
- Communicate with faculty
- Gather information _at_ audience expectations
- Supply formats for presenting written responses
to various academic audiences and inform students
of what their audiences will expect in terms of
presentation, evidence, phrasing, etc
19Pre-Writing
- May need assistance
- interpreting the background reading
- referring to the text appropriately
- Talk through the process
- Relate to syllabus (objectives)
- Discuss sample paper/paragraph
20Example Dr. Hall
- Character is ____________
- What makes you think so?
- Textual support
- Integrated
- Correctly cited
21What does Good Look Like?
- Provide sample essays
- Models of phrasing
- Emphasis on student intention
- What do YOU want to say?
- Sentence patterns
- 3 to 5 choices
22Provide Structure
- Basic organizational patterns
- Paragraph
- Checklist
- Transition (Known to New)
- Essay
- Always link to syllabus/expectations
- Reading
- Be aware that this may be the underlying problem
23 Later Intervention
- Process approach is preferable
- But
- What to do with a done deal?
- Higher Order Concerns (remember rhetorical
patterns!)
24Problems Possible Solutions
- Redundant?
- Mark all repetition
- Choose one (or combine)
- Disorganized?
- Write content of sentences in margin
- Rearrange to combine like items
- Add controlling idea (topic sentence)
- Awful Grammar?
- Probably Linguistic
25Grammatical Errors
- Transition
- Verb tense
- Active vs. Passive
- Participial adjectives
- Clauses
- Noun clausesslots
- Adjective clauses
- Reduced forms
- Articlescount vs. non-count
26Transition? Reference List (Rhetorical pattern
influence)
- Verb Tenses
Reference Text - ?Chart - Azar
-
- Murphy - Active VS. Passive
- -ing VS. ed
- Articles count VS. non-count
27Summary Chart Of Verb Tenses
Azar, 1999
28Clauses (often related to fragments)
- slots
- subject / verb / (D.O.) / (I.O.)
- The boy / drove / the car
- The tall boy / recklessly drove / the car that he
had stolen - The unbelievably tall boy wearing a torn, black
leather jacket and a broken pair of handcuffs.
29Adjective clauses
- reduced forms
- Remember the verb!
- Placement
- Touch the word it describes
30Relax
- Look for patterns
- One thing at a time
- Develop referral system