Post by Admin on Dec 29, 2019 5:08:00 GMT
Joint Construction for Writing
Teaching strategy – Joint construction
Purpose of this activity
Joint construction involves the teacher and students working together to collaboratively
construct a text. The teacher scaffolds the students through questions, thinking aloud,
explanations etc, as they write the text together. It is one of the writing strategies that
form the Curriculum Cycle, based on a genre approach to teaching writing. Students are
best supported to engage in a joint construction of text when they have been learning
about a topic and have completed some research (i.e. building field knowledge) and
have been explicitly taught something about the particular genre which is the focus of
the joint construction (i.e. deconstruction). It is best used with small groups, but can
also be used with individuals or whole class groups.
How this helps ESL students in particular
Joint construction:
• models writing conventions and behaviours;
• provides a context for students to learn and talk about the structures and features of different text types;
• supports students to understand how purpose and audience impact on language choices;
• scaffolds the students through the writing process;
• allows students to write a text that they might not be able to write independently in a supportive context;
• provides a model for students to use for independent writing.
Procedure
The key steps of joint construction are:
• The teacher decides on the genre to be taught and the general topic of the text;
• The teacher sets the scene for the students, explaining the type of text that is to be written, the intended audience and the topic;
• The teacher guides the students through questions, prompts, reviewing what they know about the text type and the topic;
• The teacher and student write the text together, with the students contributing ideas about what should be written and the language that should be used. The teacher and students use the metalanguage (that is a language to talk about language) which has been developed through explicit teaching about the text type and its structural and language features;
• The text is edited and proofread, then published.
Using joint construction with ESL students
Before jointly constructing a text with students:
• Build the students’ knowledge of the field or topic through:
o research tasks or activities which develop vocabulary (e.g. a glossary)
o activities which develop links between concepts and ideas relevant to the topic
(e.g. concept map)
o activities which develop organisation of information (e.g. data chart).
• Examine examples of the text type (through deconstruction or modelling) so that the
students are familiar with the structures and features of the genre which you expect
them to include in the text.
Using metalanguage
Use the metalanguage (i.e. the language you have been using with the students to talk about
language) as you write and edit the text, for example the stages of an information report
about animals:
• general classification, description, appearance, habitat etc
• grammatical items such as action verbs, noun groups, adverbials of place, pronouns
• organisational and cohesion features such as paragraph, topic sentence, referring
words.
Expect the students to use the language too as they contribute.
Presentation: bit.ly/37hSKqf
Teaching strategy – Joint construction
Purpose of this activity
Joint construction involves the teacher and students working together to collaboratively
construct a text. The teacher scaffolds the students through questions, thinking aloud,
explanations etc, as they write the text together. It is one of the writing strategies that
form the Curriculum Cycle, based on a genre approach to teaching writing. Students are
best supported to engage in a joint construction of text when they have been learning
about a topic and have completed some research (i.e. building field knowledge) and
have been explicitly taught something about the particular genre which is the focus of
the joint construction (i.e. deconstruction). It is best used with small groups, but can
also be used with individuals or whole class groups.
How this helps ESL students in particular
Joint construction:
• models writing conventions and behaviours;
• provides a context for students to learn and talk about the structures and features of different text types;
• supports students to understand how purpose and audience impact on language choices;
• scaffolds the students through the writing process;
• allows students to write a text that they might not be able to write independently in a supportive context;
• provides a model for students to use for independent writing.
Procedure
The key steps of joint construction are:
• The teacher decides on the genre to be taught and the general topic of the text;
• The teacher sets the scene for the students, explaining the type of text that is to be written, the intended audience and the topic;
• The teacher guides the students through questions, prompts, reviewing what they know about the text type and the topic;
• The teacher and student write the text together, with the students contributing ideas about what should be written and the language that should be used. The teacher and students use the metalanguage (that is a language to talk about language) which has been developed through explicit teaching about the text type and its structural and language features;
• The text is edited and proofread, then published.
Using joint construction with ESL students
Before jointly constructing a text with students:
• Build the students’ knowledge of the field or topic through:
o research tasks or activities which develop vocabulary (e.g. a glossary)
o activities which develop links between concepts and ideas relevant to the topic
(e.g. concept map)
o activities which develop organisation of information (e.g. data chart).
• Examine examples of the text type (through deconstruction or modelling) so that the
students are familiar with the structures and features of the genre which you expect
them to include in the text.
Using metalanguage
Use the metalanguage (i.e. the language you have been using with the students to talk about
language) as you write and edit the text, for example the stages of an information report
about animals:
• general classification, description, appearance, habitat etc
• grammatical items such as action verbs, noun groups, adverbials of place, pronouns
• organisational and cohesion features such as paragraph, topic sentence, referring
words.
Expect the students to use the language too as they contribute.
Presentation: bit.ly/37hSKqf