As I reflect on
my past experiences with writing, I am immediately compelled to state that my
overall writing experience was good. I always had the best and most passionate
teachers throughout my writing journey. I recall that much of my primary school
writing instruction was to encourage writing as a means of self-expression.
Almost all of my primary school instructors constantly lectured us about using writing
to tell our personal stories, keep journals of our adventures and write short
stories about anything that came to mind. I believe that majority of my
instructors used the process-oriented approach due to the fact they stimulated
us to writing as a means of self-discovery. For example, I recall my 4th
grade teacher gave us an end of the year writing assignment. We had to come up
with a story based off a painting that had been completed earlier in the year.
It was a chance to be creative and burrow deep down into our knowledge base of
information and imagination in order to create a story that was unique to our
individual experiences.
In my university
experiences with writing, instructors were unforgiving and had high
expectations for completed assignments. They provided materials and resources
for students to use in order to produce high quality work. In terms of
principles and methods my instructors did not provide of us with new skills
sets or knowledge in terms of writing. However, more so stressed the fact that
the skills learned in secondary school; such as, identifying your audience,
successfully writing a thesis statement, having adequate support and answering
the prompt effectively were ideally things that should have already been
acquired and only to be improved upon. I think this is a much more
product-oriented approach to teaching writing. In my case, the lack of
instruction, practice and individual feedback hindered me; conversely, other instructors that I encountered were much more involved in their students’
progress and improvement. Nevertheless, it did help to reinforce the techniques,
rules and formulas required to produce a good quality writing assignment.
As my writing
skills have developed and continues to develop. I feel that the instruction
that I received in the classroom in my primary schooling has molded me into the
writer/reader that I am today. Due to my primary school instructors whom I have
discerned used the process-oriented approach as expressivist; who encouraged a
wide range of self-discovery writing prompts and activities. Conversely, the
exact opposite can be said regarding my university classroom instruction. Which
I believe focused on a more product-orientated approach with some integrated
process-orientation approaches. For example, regarding rhetorical practices we
were given argumentative prompts where we had to choose a position and another
prompt where we had inform readers of an issue and provide a solution.
I have attempted
to learn several languages, Japanese being one of the many languages that I
tackled over the years. I have never taken a formal writing class in regards to
academia. The classes that I have taken only teach the writing necessities; such
as filling out documentation, making written request and other daily needs where
writing might be required. The only purpose emphasized by the instructor for
learning to write was for daily needs, because of this I believe instructors
took a more product-oriented approach. They only wanted to see that students were
able to write in response to everyday questions in a variety of situations. On
the other hand, the instruction that I received in writing in my L1 encompassed
everyday writing necessities. In my Japanese writing class we were taught how
to properly respond to an email; and in my L1 class this was taught as a form
of formal writing. However, similarly my experience in both settings stressed
the importance of writing formalities.
My classroom
experience with writing has been an exciting and revealing journey. The passion
that I have for writing stems from my love of self-expression. This is evident in
the task that I assign my students. I enjoy giving students prompts that
require them to think as well as use personal experiences in their responses. I
encourage making outlines and brainstorming before sitting down to write. I am
an expressivist through and through. I use writing as a means of
self-discovery; while focusing on rhetorical practices because I teach in an
academic setting. I strongly believe that the skills and strategies that my students
need to master are building a strong vocabulary, taking time to explore and
develop topics and outlining before the writing begins. In my opinion, this creates
strong writers.
I think that by
cultivating an understanding and of diverse models of writing and instructional
methods can help me accommodate a wide range of L2 learners. No single method of
teaching is going to work in every setting with every student. In order to be a
more effective writing instructor I have to be able to incorporate different practices
into my writing instruction. For example, I was teaching English in a community
setting where was need for students to learn the formats and formulas for writing
an essay. They simply needed to learn how to write in some cases only a basic
knowledge of was all they needed. Whereas, teaching in an academic setting that
requires focusing on the various writing styles and practices. In the community
setting students often only need enough basic writing skills to obtain a job
and in the academic settings students require extensive knowledge of the formal
writing criteria. A single method will never work because the dynamics of the classroom
setting, students and context are forever changing.
Gabrielle,
ReplyDeleteWow - learning Japanese! That is quite an undertaking and I tip my hat to you! I can understand the difficulty you experienced in being asked to write in a completely new way as an undergraduate. I have come to realize that each school has its own way of doing things. Not all instructors are big picture thinkers, nor are they the last word on someone’s ability to write. They are, however, the arbitrator of the grade, and so we accommodate their requirements to the best of our abilities. I do believe that going from process to product is probably the easier transition because you learned to express ideas first, and then went to product where the orientation focuses on the end result. I think it is easier to go from large to small than to make small grow meaningfully into large.
Carol
That is wonderful that you had such a positive experience with writing in the primary grades. As you noted it shaped the future for you. I wish our public schools would focus on making reading & writing enjoyable for students in those early years.
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