November 2012
During timed writing assignments in the average class, students write their essays while instructors enforce a culture of quiet. Students are actively discouraged from talking to each other, and even conversations relevant to the task at hand, such as one student asking another how to spell a word, execute an idiomatic phrase, or provide the translation of a word or expression into English from their shared native language, are effectively discouraged. Time is called, students turn in their essays to be critiqued by their instructors. Once graded, the essays are returned to students for review and, possibly, error analysis and revision.
While the above scenario may be the norm, it would behoove teachers to challenge the widely held belief that the writing process is an individual and quietly contemplative act. Despite the fact that many ESL writing instructors engage students in a collaborative peer and revision review process after students have written an initial draft of an essay, very few instructors make interaction and collaboration an integral part of the writing process from its inception. However, there is much to be gained from forging deeper connections, during the writing process, among speaking, metacognition, and writing.
A growing body of theoretical and empirical research suggests that utilizing social interaction between ESL students while they write supports their mastery of the multifarious cognitive skills needed for academic writing (e.g., Atkinson, 2003; Weissberg, 2006). The research also indicates that social interaction while writing helps learners develop metacognitive knowledge that can positively influence both their writing and their academic ability (Angelova, 2001; Kasper, 1997; Ruttle, 2004). Following are some activities that will enable teachers to restage a timed writing activity so that students can integrate speaking and writing during the three main stages of the writing process: prewriting, active writing, and postwriting.
Class Session #1
Prewriting: Peer-to-Peer Prewriting Interviews
Time Frame: 15 minutes
During Writing: Think Aloud/Read Aloud Breaks
Time Frame: 60–75 minutes
Class Session #2
After Writing: Peer-to-Peer Postwriting Conferences
Time Frame: 30 minutes–1 hour
Peer-to-Peer Writing Conference Guidelines Please provide your partner with feedback on the following aspects of his/her writing:
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When students write out loud they learn not only that writing is a meaning-making process, but they also learn that they, as writers, can make deliberate choices about how they express their thoughts and ideas through writing. Best of all, when teachers encourage their students to integrate speaking and writing, teachers free their students from the false constraint of writing in a linguistic vacuum. Successful writing, it turns out, can be a loud, engaging, communal experience.
References
Angelova, M. (2001). Metacognitive knowledge in EFL writing. Academic Exchange Quarterly, 5(3), 78–83.
Atkinson, D. (2003). L2 writing in the post-process era: Introduction. Journal of Second Language Writing, 12, 3–15.
Kasper, L. F. (1997). Assessing the metacognitive growth of ESL student writers. TESL-EJ, 3(1). Retrieved from http://www.cc.kyoto-su.ac.jp/information/tesl-ej/ej09/a1.html.
Ruttle, K. (2004). What goes on inside my head when I'm writing? A case study of 8–9-year-old boys. Literacy, 38(2), 71–77. doi: 10.1111/j.0034-0472.2004.03802002.x
Weissberg, R. (2006). Connecting speaking and writing in second language instruction. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.
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Jessie Hayden is an ESL instructor at Georgia Perimeter College in Atlanta, Georgia. She earned her MS in Applied Linguistics/Teaching English as a Second Language from Georgia State University. During her career, she has served adult learners in ESL literacy programs and in higher education settings both in the United States and in the Middle East. She has three passions: teaching ESL writing, riding horses, and gardening organically.
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Extended Education Specialist II (Senior Program Coordinator), California State University, San Bernardino, California, USA
Instructor or Assistant Professor of ESOL, Columbia College, Columbia, Missouri, USA
Full-Time Intensive English Program Faculty, Spring Int'l Language Center, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas, USA
Assistant Professor of Intensive English, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, USA
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