Tuesday 16 July 2013

Process Approach to Teaching Writing

What is process approach?

The process approach treats all writing as a creative act which requires time and positive feedback to be done well. In process writing, the teacher moves away from being someone who sets students a writing topic and receives the finished product for correction without any intervention in the writing process itself (British Council, 2003)


The changing roles of teacher and students

The teacher needs to move away from being a marker to a reader, responding to the content of student writing more than the form. Students should be encouraged to think about audience: Who is the writing for? What does this reader need to know? Students also need to realise that what they put down on paper can be changed: Things can be deleted, added, restructured, reorganised, etc. 


What stages are there in a process approach to writing?

Although there are many ways of approaching process writing, it can be broken down into three stages:

Pre-writing
The teacher needs to stimulate students' creativity, to get them thinking 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 much (if any) written work. If they do, then the teacher can contribute with advice on how to improve their initial ideas.

Focusing ideas
During this stage, students write without much attention to the accuracy of their work or the organisation. The most important feature is meaning. Here, the teacher (or other students) should concentrate on the content
of the writing. Is it coherent? Is there anything missing? Anything extra?

Evaluating, structuring and editing
Now the writing is adapted to a readership. Students should focus more on form and on producing a finished piece of work. The teacher can help with error correction and give organisational advice.


Classroom activities
Here are some ideas for classroom activities related to the stages above:

Pre-writing

  • Brainstorming
    Getting started can be difficult, so students divided into groups quickly produce words and ideas about the writing.
  • Planning
    Students make a plan of the writing before they start. These plans can be compared and discussed in groups before writing takes place.
  • Generating ideas
    Discovery tasks such as cubing (students write quickly about the subject in six different ways - they:
    • 1. describe it
    • 2. compare it
    • 3. associate it
    • 4. analyze it
    • 5. apply it
    • 6. argue for or against it.
  • Questioning
    In groups, the idea is to generate lots of questions about the topic. This helps 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.
  • Discussion and debate
    The teacher helps students with topics, helping them develop ideas in a positive and encouraging way.

Focusing ideas
  • Fast writing
    The students write quickly on a topic for five to ten minutes without worrying about correct language or punctuation. Writing as quickly as possible, if they cannot 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.
  • Group compositions
    Working together in groups, sharing ideas. This collaborative writing is especially valuable as it involves other skills (speaking in particular.)
  • Changing viewpoints
    A good writing activity to follow a role-play or storytelling activity. Different students choose different points of view and think about /discuss what this character would write in a diary, witness statement, etc.
  • Varying form
    Similar to the activity above, but instead of different viewpoints, different text types are selected. How would the text be different if it were written as a letter, or a newspaper article, etc.

Evaluating, Structuring and Editing
  • Ordering
    Students take the notes written in one of the pre-writing activities above and organise them. What would come first? Why? Here it is good to tell them to start with information known to the reader before moving onto what the reader does not know.
  • Self-editing
    A good writer must learn how to evaluate their own language - to improve through checking their own text, looking for errors, structure. This way students will become better writers.
  • Peer editing and proof-reading
    Here, the texts are interchanged and the evaluation is done by other students. In the real world, it is common for writers to ask friends and colleagues to check texts for spelling, etc. You could also ask the students to reduce the texts, to edit them, concentrating on the most important information.

 References:
 BBC Council. (2003). Approaches to process writing. Retrieved from http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/articles/approaches-process-writing

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