Writing
What
and why?
In
common with LISTENING,
READING and SPEAKING,
there are two main roles for writing in language teaching. The first
is as a goal of learning. It is important for students to
develop the writing skill in order to express themselves in written
English in letters, messages, stories, and so on. The second role,
however, is as a means of learning. Writing can provide further
sources of practice and can help the students remember the words,
phrases, grammar, etc. that they are learning. By working on writing
tasks, students can become closely involved with the language and,
in doing so, develop their general language proficiency. Writing
can thus form a very important element in the course.
Practical
ideas
- Encourage
the students to keep written records of what they learn. The LANGUAGE
RECORD will be useful in this respect.
- Before
calling on the students to do any large oral activity, such as
ROLE PLAY, students
can be encouraged to plan in writing what they are going to say.
- Where
students are involved in writing as a goal of language learning,
encourage them to go through the various stages of collecting
ideas, drafting, getting FEEDBACK
from a reader, revising and final production. You can incorporate
these stages of development into a PROCESS
WRITING approach.
- Where
possible, give the students real-life tasks which have a real
audience. This could be writing a letter requesting information,
making a PARCEL
OF ENGLISH, writing to pen-friends and so on. Writing to other
students can also provide an audience (see INTERACTIVE
WRITING).
- In
correcting students' writing, try not to over-correct. A page
full of red ink can be very demoralising! There are a number of
alternative ways of approaching ERROR
CORRECTION:
- Ask
the students to underline the things they are not sure of
or where they would like your help - you need only then correct
the things they have identified.
- Limit
yourself to no more than six to eight points for correction.
- Rather
than focusing on the form of what they have written, respond
to the message. Write a brief reply to the ideas they have
expressed.
- Rather
than correcting, give hints or clues and encourage the students
to correct their own work. You can use a marking scheme (e.g.
Sp = spelling, WW = wrong word, and so on).

|