Fellag, L. R. (2010). From reading to writing 3. White Plains, NY: Pearson Education. From Reading to Writing 3 is the third in a
series of four textbooks designed to guide English learners toward
writing their own texts. The level of this particular book is
intermediate. Book 1 is aimed at the beginning level, Book 2 at high
beginning, and Book 4 at high intermediate level ESL students (p. v).
Although the editors do not specify which age group would benefit most
from this series, subjects such as brain research, leisure activities,
and how generations evolve reveal a teen-to-adult focus, which makes the
book appropriate for both high school and college-level instruction.
The writing activities focus on expository, process, cause-and-effect,
comparison and contrast, and literary analysis essays, which are
required at the high school level. The reading passages preceding the
writing activities have a similar focus.
Each lesson starts with high-interest passages for students to
read. Some of the topics are health, clothing, brain research, leisure
activities including paintball, six degrees of separation, financial
planning, and Generation Y (born 1976-1990). These timeless subjects
provide information that are appealing for both teen and adult learners.
The vocabulary is corpus-based and taken from the Academic Word List,
General Service List, and Most Common English Idioms List (Coxhead,
2000; Liu, 2003).
The reading passages, vocabulary, and additional activities act
as a stepping stone for ESL students to create their own writing. The
writing assignments follow step-by-step instructions infused with all
stages of the writing process. For instance, having identified the main
idea and details in the text, the students are asked to write topic
sentences for detail paragraphs in a guided exercise. Later they are
encouraged to come up with their own topic sentences for their
paragraphs.
In addition to the classroom textbook, From Reading to
Writing 3 includes access to an online evaluative tool
designed by Educational Testing Services called ProofWriter, which
provides students with individualized feedback on usage, grammar,
mechanics, and style. With the help of this tool, teachers are freed to
focus on higher-level writing skills such as ideas and organization.
Each book comes with a coupon code that students can use 16 times. When
these times are used up, they can “recharge” their coupon code online at
http://longman.proofwriter.ets.org to purchase up to 100 additional
sessions An online Teacher’s Manual includes an answer key for the
activities in the textbook and also unit tests. (The manual is not
available for review, so exactly how it complements the text could not
be assessed.)
From Reading to Writing 3 has eight units of
two chapters each. Each chapter is divided into two parts: Reading and
Writing. In the first part, pre-reading activities “build schema” and
introduce “key vocabulary” (p. vii). These activities include discussion
questions for pairs or small groups and skimming for main ideas and
details. The following “bridge” section titled “From Reading to Writing”
encourages students to reflect on the content of the reading passages
and to activate their vocabulary as a preparation for writing. The
activities in this section range from small-group discussions to journal
reflections. The writing section provides a mentor text for students to
see what they are required to create. Specific instructions follow the
mentor text to guide students toward conciseness in their own
compositions. The section “Writing Assignment” leads students step by
step to construct their own writing, from ideas and organization to
revision and editing to writing the final copy. Because the online
evaluative tool supports students individually, it also promotes
self-evaluation.
A scope-and-sequence table at the beginning provides a brief
visual summary of the whole book, showing which reading and writing
skills are covered in each chapter. Additional reference materials on
such topics as avoiding plagiarism, grammar reference, correction
symbols, and vocabulary review are located at the end of the textbook.
Vocabulary review provides additional practice for the words targeted in
the chapters employing different strategies, such as multiple-choice
questions, matching, and filling in the blanks. The bridge sections
refer the students to this additional resource to assist in activating
vocabulary. A Target Vocabulary section provides a list of the words
covered in each chapter as a quick reference. The words are marked with
an asterisk to demonstrate in which word list they are included (see
references below).
Third in a series of four books, From Reading to
Writing provides pre-academic English learners with
instruction from sentence patterns to language usage so they can utilize
these skills in their own composition. The continuous focus on main
idea, supporting details, and transition words/phrases prepares the
students to write successful texts. The simple and easy-to-follow format
of the book clarifies the connection between reading and writing better
than most textbooks available in the market.
From Reading to Writing is a succinct and
focused textbook series that will enable English learners to grasp the
basics for writing effectively, from simple sentences to longer essays.
Carefully selected passages promote and clarify the inseparable link
between reading and writing. The cyclical review of the vocabulary helps
learners internalize the academic words they will encounter in their
studies. The straightforward presentation of the material offers a clear
explanation of complicated concepts, such as inference, cohesive
devices, and literary terms. Because most ESL learners struggle with
language usage and sentence fluency in general, this series uses the
mentor texts as a springboard to help students gain confidence in their
own compositions.
The textbook does not require intensive front-loading to
activate prior knowledge. The activities offer sufficient background
information so even the most novice teacher of writing would be able to
pick up the book and teach from it. The nonthreatening format may help
reduce the level of anxiety a learner might have regarding reading and
writing in a second language.
REFERENCES
Coxhead, A. (2000). “A New Academic Word List.” TESOL
Quarterly, 34, 213-238.
Liu, D. (2003). “The Most Frequently Used Spoken American
English Idioms: A Corpus Analysis and Its Implications.” TESOL
Quarterly, 37, 671-700.
Meryem D. Kennedy, merduvken@gmail.com, has
been working with English language learners for almost 20 years, both
nationally and internationally. As a second-language speaker herself,
she adds a unique perspective to the review of this book. Meryem is a
Central Arizona Writing Project Fellow and currently teaches high school
ESL in Phoenix, Arizona. |