scholarly journals Argumentation Across L1 and L2: Examination of Three Instructional Treatments of Genre-based Approach to Teaching Writing

2014 ◽  
Vol 98 ◽  
pp. 968-975
Author(s):  
Farzaneh Khodabandeh
2021 ◽  
pp. 074108832110055
Author(s):  
Mary Ryan ◽  
Maryam Khosronejad ◽  
Georgina Barton ◽  
Lisa Kervin ◽  
Debra Myhill

Writing requires a high level of nuanced decision-making related to language, purpose, audience, and medium. Writing teachers thus need a deep understanding of language, process, and pedagogy, and of the interface between them. This article draws on reflexivity theory to interrogate the pedagogical priorities and perspectives of 19 writing teachers in primary classrooms across Australia. Data are composed of teacher interview transcripts and nuanced time analyses of classroom observation videos. Findings show that teachers experience both enabling and constraining conditions that emerge in different ways in different contexts. Enablements include high motivations to teach writing and a reflective and collaborative approach to practice. However, constraints were evident in areas of time management, dominance of teacher talk, teachers’ scope and confidence in their knowledge and practice, and a perceived lack of professional support for writing pedagogy. The article concludes with recommendations for a reflexive approach to managing these emergences in the teaching of writing.


1992 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
pp. 41-53 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas N. Kluwin ◽  
Arlene Blumenthal Kelly

A 2-year project to improve the writing skills of children who are deaf included instruction for teachers in the process approach to teaching writing. The project encompassed 10 public school programs for students who are deaf and included 325 students in Grades 4–10 and 52 teachers. The project included specific training goals for teachers, a self-report procedure for the teachers, and a data-collection and analysis phase to assess short-term effects on students' writing. Teacher self-reports indicated widespread involvement in the project, and pretest and posttest results showed dramatic improvement in students' writing—particularly in grammatical skills. Scoring systems for students' papers are included.


2021 ◽  
pp. 18-27
Author(s):  
Mohamed Yacoub

Abstract Writing poetry is an effective way of teaching in the ESL classroom, especially when approached through the lens of the translingual perspective. This paper introduces the translingual approach to teaching and how ESL teachers of writing can benefit from this approach to teach writing poetry. The paper then provides two practical examples of how to approach teaching writing poetry in the ESL classroom from a translingual perspective. The purpose of this paper, hence, is to argue that writing poetry in the ESL classroom can be a fertile environment that houses different hybrid norms that students bring to the classroom, provides good moments for negotiation, and valorizes creativity. This paper concludes that the translingual approach to writing poetry is less intimidating and more of a hybridity-tolerant way for students to learn English language and to experience the world differently. Poetry becomes a fertile environment for students to perceive language as a hybrid of norms and to learn how to negotiate meanings, structures, and grammar. Keywords: Creative, efficacy, ESL classroom, negotiations, poetry, translingualism, writing


2016 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-89 ◽  
Author(s):  
May Olaug Horverak

Abstract In the tradition of teaching English as a second language, there has been an increased interest in how functional language descriptions and understandings of genres may be used as resources for making meaning. The present study investigates what impact writing instruction that draws upon systemic functional linguistics (SFL) applied through a genre-pedagogy approach has on students’ ability to write argumentative essays. This includes explicit grammar instruction inspired by SFL, as well as instruction on text structure. The study uses a mixed-methods approach, with a quasi-experiment followed up by quantitative and qualitative analyses of the collected material. Statistical analyses indicate a significant positive effect on writing performance in the intervention groups, regardless of gender, first language and previous level of writing. As the study lacks control groups, the quantitative analysis was complemented with examples from student texts to illustrate the improvement revealed in the statistical analysis. The findings suggest that SFL applied through a genre-pedagogy approach to teaching writing may help students to improve their writing skills.


2000 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 33
Author(s):  
Glenn Toh

This article reports on a practical writing workshop for Thai teachers of English in a rural Thai setting. The teachers were participants in a Certificate in TEFL course sponsored by the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA and taught by the Southeast Asian Ministers of Education Organization, Regional Language Centre (SEAMEO RELC). The genre approach to teaching writing is proposed as a way of helping teachers look beyond structural elements like vocabulary, punctuation, and spelling. The social functions and language choices of three important genres of writing, Description, Anecdote, and News Item, are examined in the article. The principles and practices may be generalizable to similar situations, that is, places where English is taught as a foreign language.


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