English Language Teaching Vol. , No. March 2009



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Topic : Why People Take Drugs

  • Aims:

    •To develop students’ abilities to organize information and construct it into a text.
    •To develop students’ abilities to revise, redraft and improve their writing.
    •To develop students’ abilities to construct questions.

      1. Procedure

        1. Prewriting tasks:

          1. Rationale: In this part of the lesson, 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, and it is not always necessary that students actually produce more (if any) written work. If they do, then the teacher can contribute with advice on how to improve their initial ideas.

          2. Write up the headline Why People Take Drugs?

    Tribble (1996) states that assigning tasks that pose real problems to the learner will keep their motivation high and create a sense of achievement. I have found this to be true in my own experience, and that by engaging learners in something that i) they are interested in, and ii) they can give positive input to, can create a truly active and interactive writing environment.

          1. Group brainstorming on the given topic (Why people take drugs?)

    As is well-known, getting started can be difficult, so students divided into groups quickly, work cooperatively and write down all the ideas that come to mind in connection with the given topic. According to my teaching experience, as little as 5 minutes can be effective.
    Brainstorming involves thinking quickly and without inhibition, which can ultimately lead to an interesting piece of writing.
    The teacher should remain in the background during this phase, only supplying language support when students need it, so as not to inhibit students in the production of their ideas.
    •Evaluating ideas during brainstorming can be intimidating, and can have a negative effect, limiting the creativity the process is designed to promote.

          1. Assessing ideas

    Students are encouraged to extend their ideas into a mind map, spidergram or linear form.
    It is in this stage that students can judge the quality and usefulness of their ideas.
    A mind map or spidergram is also an organized display of information, which can be more easily converted into a draft.
    such graphics also make the (hierarchical) relationship of ideas more easily obvious, which will help students with the structure of their texts.

          1. A model text:

    To the lower level students in English, I think it is better to combine the process- and product-oriented approach to teaching writing. Of course, I believe that it is of great importance from the process-oriented approach to perform the above discussion stages in writing. Next, I tend to introduce a model text.
    The reading of a model text, so important in a product-oriented approach to writing, is not so as to subjugate the students’ ideas to their organization, but so as to make students aware that there is a particular way to express their ideas. In this way, students are given the form in order to enable them to adapt it to carry their own meaning. Ellis found evidence to suggest that “focusing learners ’ attention on forms, and the meaning they realize the context of communication activities, results in successful language learning.”
    Focus on model text coherence
    Coherence refers to the logical development of ideas within a text and it is an important subskill for students to be aware of. The teacher can highlight this in various ways, by focusing on the topic and function of each paragraph for example, or by examining how the writer has chosen to order his arguments. This focus will hopefully show students that if they are to convey their message successfully, they will have to make their text “reader friendly”.
    •Cohesion
    Cohesion refers to the grammatical and lexical connections between individual clauses. The grammatical links can be classified under three broad types:

    • Referents (pronouns, the article “the”, demonstratives)

    • Ellipsis (leaving out of a words or phrases where they are unnecessary)

    • Conjunction (a word which joins phrases or clauses together)

    Pronouns, whether subject(he), object(him), possessive(his), relative(who), or reflexive(himself), are often underused or misused by students while performing a writing task, resulting in either confusion as to the reference or tedious repetition of a noun.
    One way of raising awareness of the key function that pronouns play within a text is to ask students to circle all the pronouns, then to use arrows to connect them to their referent. This shows students that pronouns can be found by looking back or forwards in the text.
    There are many other activities that can be used to focus on cohesion. For example, asking students to replace a sentence which is missing from each paragraph, or to replace the first sentence of each paragraph, matching clauses which have been separated or gapping conjunctions which students must replace from a selection.

          1. Questioning :

    In the process of group discussion, there must generate lots of questions about the topic. The teacher should try his/her best to give proper answers immediately which can help students focus upon audience as they consider what the reader needs to know. The answers to these questions will form the basis to the composition. At the same time, the teacher had better provide more guidance in student’s developing ideas in a positive and encouraging way.
    All of the above activities work best if carried out in groups as groupings make the tasks livelier and more enjoyable. Moreover, if students can work together, assisting each other, then the atmosphere of the writing class may be less intimidating, and perhaps students will not be afraid of the complexity of writing tasks.

        1. Writing Production

    This stage involves the learners in writing the first draft of their texts with a partner. This pair work will help students see that writing really is co-operative, a relationship between writer and reader. Usually, the writer has to imagine a reader, but co-operative writing provides each writer with a reader and makes the task more realistic and interactive.

          1. Fast and collaborative writing:

    The students write quickly on a topic for five or ten minutes without worrying about correct language or punctuation. Writing as quickly as possible, if they can’t think of a word, they leave a space or write it in their own language. The important thing is to keep writing. Later this text is revised. At the same time, I find collaborative writing can be quite motivating. It enables the stronger students to help the weaker ones.

          1. Whole class text construction, composing on the blackboard and parallel writing

    These techniques have their foundation in product writing but are effective in providing a framework for lower level students to work from. These techniques can develop a sense of collective achievement, while eliminating the fear of being left to “go it alone”, completely unguided.

          1. Students consult each other and co-construct texts

    During such an activity, the teacher should move around listening to their comments, providing feedback or answering questions on structure, lexical items, the validity of an argument, the order of presentation of the information, etc. therefore, I can keep track of their progress and work out a record of most frequent questions, doubts and inaccuracies for a future’s error analysis’ session.

          1. Revision

    • Self-editing

    A good writer must learn how to evaluate their own language, how to improve through checking their own text, looking for errors. This way students will become better writers.

    • Peer Editing

    Students exchange their first drafts of a text and point out changes which are needed to help the reader(e.g. better organization, paragraph divisions, sentence variety, vocabulary choice). They can also act as each other’s editors (spotting vocabulary repetitions, grammatical errors, spelling mistakes, etc). At the same time, students are required to provide written feedback to the student authors.
    Peer editing is a useful tool for any level of learner, for example, to the intermediate level students, this can be used to assess how effectively an essay question has been answered.

    • Whole class discussion of how a particular text might need adjustment according to the audience it is addressed to.

    One technique I regularly employ is to ask my students to imagine that I am a small child, and to explain what they consider to be a straightforward topic (for example, Why People Take Drugs?) in words that a child would understand. I then ask them to explain the same topic to me, only this time they imagine I am a university professor, and ask them to adjust their language appropriately.

    • Evaluation:

    It takes a lot of time and efforts to write, and so it is only fair that student writing is responded to suitably. Positive comments can help build student confidence and create good feeling for the next writing class. Through my experience I’ve found that evaluation is most useful if it is given on the basis of what the learner has asked for. In my experience, learners still favor comments on the grammatical and lexical correctness of their work. In order to make this interactive activity, I use an error correction code, which serves to highlight the error but still requires the learners to reflect on what the error actually is. Sometimes I use some questions like “What do you mean here?” or, “Can you tell me more about this?”.

    • Final draft

    Drafts are returned and improvement are made based upon peer feedback. Then the final draft is written. In addition, students can also exchange and read each others’ work and perhaps even write a response or reply.

    1. Conclusion

    Experimental study shows that the two groups of students who received two different models of teaching writing were all making significant progress in their writing skill, while the control groups who as a whole class received full open process model of teaching made less progress in their writing skill except for some good students who scored almost as high.
    It is concluded that the process approach to teaching writing can be and is ideally applied in different teaching models, and when we use the same process approach but different models of teaching writing to teach the different students, an optimal teaching effect can be realized.
    References
    Caifang Kong. (2005). Review on the Writing Theories of Foreign language in China. Foreign Languages’ Teaching and Research.
    Flower, L. (1985). Problem-solving strategies for writing. Second Edition. San Diego, Harcourt: Brace Jovanich.
    Fowler W.S. (1989). Progressive Writing Skills. Surry: Thomas Nelson and Sons Ltd.
    Graham Stanley. (1993). Process Writing, British Council, Barcelona.
    James McCrimmon, (1994). Writing with a Purpose. Houghton Mifflin co.
    Lanzhen Cai. (2001). Application of Product Teaching on College English Writing. Journal of the Foreign Language World.
    Liming Deng. (2003). Hints of Systematic Research of Process Teaching to College English Teaching. Foreign Language Teaching.
    Murray, D. (1980). Writing as Process: How Writing Finds its Own Meaning. In T.R. Donovan and B.W.MecClelland(eds), English Approach in Teaching Writing.
    Nunan, David. (1991). Language Teaching Methodology. A Textbook for Teachers. Prentice Hall.
    Nunan, David. (2001). Second English Teaching and Learning. Beijing: Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press.
    Tribble, C. Writing. (1996). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Vanessa Steele. (1992). Product and Process Writing: A Comparison. Rowley: Newbury House.
    Xinying Hu. (2003). Application of Process Teaching. Journal of the Foreign Language World.






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