Teaching English as a Foreign Language

(Chris Devlin) #1

Chapter 11: Write or Wrong? Teaching Writing Lessons 161


Structuring a Writing Lesson


For a writing lesson to be successful, you need to set the writing task up so
that students are clear about what they have to do and how best to tackle it.

A wide variety of tasks cover various sub-skills too, for example using regis-
ter, which means the right formal or informal style, and adapting to different
kinds of texts.

When deciding on a writing task to set, ask yourself some questions as an
initial checklist.

✓ Is it appropriate for the class in terms of level, relevance and interest?


✓ Is it clear what the purpose of the task is?


✓ Is it clear who the imagined reader is?


✓ Do the students have sufficient information to complete the task (vocab-
ulary, layout, background, examples)?


If you have a task which seems to fit the bill, you now need to build a lesson
around it.

Energising the class with pre-writing tasks


As writing is often a quiet, solitary activity, a pre-writing task is usually nec-
essary because such tasks energise and prepare the students. They allow
for collaboration and help students put together ideas which will make the
actual writing task more successful.

Fostering discussion
A class discussion is a good way to generate ideas on the writing topic.

To begin the discussion provide an example of the topic. Tell a story, use a
visual image or provide a text which gets students thinking along the right
lines. You could also put some keys words on the board and ask students
what they have in common. Then, ask students to add some more relevant
words to the ones you have presented.

If the task you intend to set is a composition about an interesting experience
while on holiday, for example, you can begin the lesson with a personal anec-
dote about one of your holidays and then open the topic up to the students
to tell each other similar stories, which should get the creative juices flowing.
Alternatively, a short reading about a trip, an exotic piece of music or stimu-
lating photograph from a far away land can stimulate conversation which
leads in the direction of the writing topic.
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