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    Teaching Integrated Writing Skills.doc

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    Nguồn: Sưu tầm
    Người gửi: Đào Xuân Thành (trang riêng)
    Ngày gửi: 23h:43' 19-07-2009
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    Teaching Integrated Writing Skills
    Dr. Cecilia B-Ikeguchi Tokyo Kasei Gakuin: Tsukuba Women`s University (Japan)
    This article was published in the International Journal for Teachers of Writing Skills. (January, 1997)
    This paper presents a technique in the Advance Writing Class that has been proven successful in teaching the skills of summarizing, outlining, expressing opinion through the medium of writing. In integrating Writing Lessons with reading, speaking and of course listening, students are able to produce dynamic writing output.
    A Brief Theoretical Background and the Background of the Students
    This paper rests on the assumption that there is a staged development of language acquisition, and that ESL learners go through different stages of development towards the target language. More specifically this implies that students learn different grammatical structures at different levels of development in each of the four skills of listening, speaking, reading and writing. At each stage, some grammatical structures build on other structures and can not be acquired before other structure. With focus on Writing skills, this paper reports on a successful and effective teaching and learning technique used with Japanese university students in the Advance Writing Classes.
    Japanese students come from a mono-language environment, where Japanese is the predominant language at home and in the community, notwithstanding the school. English education in Japan is spelled out in such a way that students start to learn the language formally in Junior High School where heavy emphasis is placed on translations and grammar studies in preparation for University Entrance Examination. This being the case, university students are placed into three levels: the Beginning, Intermediate and Advance in their Writing classes.
    Japanese students in the advance level usually are a good mixture of those who have at least a year of overseas study and those who have not. Based on the Developmental Language Acquisition Theory mentioned above, learners at this stage, with influences from L1 Writing, are now said to be able to write in paragraph forms, with a paragraph being defined as a coherent presentation of a number of utterance tied together by an overall message or intent. What distinguishes a paragraph from a set of sentences is primarily textual cohesion which refers to elements that refer forward and backward among across sentence boundaries that tie sentences together. By this time, Japanese university students are able to narrate, describe, and manipulate sentence structures to a certain extent that they express what they really are eager to communicate. Consequently, they are also able to use correctly discourse connectors, subordination and coordination. After having mastered the structural elements and style of paragraph writing, they can and should tbe allowed to write longer forms of writing.
    The Teaching of Writing, Integrated with Other Skills
    The most common problem that confronts teachers of a Writing Class does not lie so much on what to ask students to write about; the difficulty is more on how to motivate the students to write interesting and effective materials. Writing for writing sake is a drag, and produces boring output. The lesson plan presented here, by combining the teaching of writing with other skills, allows students freedom to express themselves meaningfully.
    The first phase of the lesson begins one week before with the giving of the ASSIGNMENT. I read (or write on the board, or make copies of) a list of as many topics which I think to be of interest to the group. I allow the students to choose any one topic that they are most interested in, and something that they would like to know more about. Then I tell them to look for a short (the shortest is one paragraph, the longest is one page) magazine or newspaper article, read thoroughly until they understood the content, and make a copy to bring to class. No writing is done yet; students are required only to completely comprehend the text they had chosen.
    The second phase of the lesson is the INTERACTIVE PHASE which begins on the day of the next class. Students who had chosen the same topic are called to sit together and form a group. The are then told to take turns in reading- or reporting- each of their articles to the group members, while everybody else listens and then ask questions to clarify points that are unclear, or make comments . I allow as much time as the students are willing to talk, or half of the whole class time. At this point, I make sure that students within the same group recognize common or diverse aspects relating to the same topic. For instance, on the topic on Environmental Problems, they would have chosen articles on: Deforestration, Garbage Problems, Noise Pollution, etc.
    The third phase of the lesson is the WRITING stage. I ask the students to get back to their seats and write about two things: (1) the topic they had chosen to read and bring to class, and (2) the other related aspects of the same topic that they found out from the group interaction. I usually am surprised to find out that they write endlessly and use up until the last minute of the lesson time.
    The length of the written material required will depend on the skills to be tested, the purpose of the lesson, and on the readiness of the class. The
     
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