Growing Grammar: Mapping the Dimensions Mark Brenchley Phil Durrant

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Grammar for writing Dick Hudson
Advertisements

On-Demand Writing Assessment
1 K-2 Smarter Balanced Assessment Update English Language Arts February 2012.
“I Can” Learning Targets
1 © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training Implementing English K-6 Using the syllabus for consistency of teacher judgement.
Introduction to phrases & clauses
Term 1 Week 9 Syntax.
WORSER BAY SCHOOL: CHILDREN AS WRITERS: A PRESENTATION FOR PARENTS MURRAY GADD: 2015.
7th Grade Portfolio of the California State Standards Miss Boenigk Columbus Middle School Miss Boenigk Columbus Middle School
Elementary MP Instructional Services Designated and Integrated ELD Sharon Rodriguez Elementary EL Coordinator, Instruction.
The Criteria.  Criterion A: Content (Receptive and Productive)  Criterion B: Organisation  Criterion C: Style and Language Mechanics  You can achieve.
Using Rhetorical Grammar in the English 90 Classroom.
GRAMMAR APPROACH By: Katherine Marzán Concepción EDUC 413 Prof. Evelyn Lugo.
Language Objectives. Planning Teachers should write both content and language objectives Content objectives are drawn from the subject area standards.
Literacy Secretariat Literacy is everyone’s business Introduction to the Australian Curriculum: English Literacy as a general capability.
Welcome Orientation. Introduction to the Course Course Objectives By the end of this course students will be able to: · Master the grammatical uses and.
TOM TORLAKSON State Superintendent of Public Instruction CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION Tom Torlakson, State Superintendent of Public Instruction Next.
Preview of Designated ELD Time Block
NSW and the rest of the country. The Australian Curriculum: English involves learning about English language, literature and literacy The Australian Curriculum:
Graphophonemic System – Phonics
Academically Productive Conversations Adapted from: Lily Wong Fillmore UC Berkeley Instructional Strategy.
What to do when you read the text during reading time.
Interdisciplinary Writing Unit: Narrative Kim Stewart READ 7140.
4th grade Expository, biography Social Studies- Native Americans
READING STRATEGY: Question-Answer Relationship Preparing for the arrival of Common Core Standards in Social Studies.
Foundation year WEEK TWO Lecturer: Ola Ahmed Refaat Academic year 2015 / English Language English Language Reading - ENGL 101.
Differences between Spoken and Written Discourse
GCSE English Language 8700 GCSE English Literature 8702 A two year course focused on the development of skills in reading, writing and speaking and listening.
Using the Resources in the Depository of Curriculum-based Learning and Teaching Resources to Introduce Text Types in English Language at Primary Level.
Teaching Plan A General Introduction. Course Description and Objective Advanced English Composition is a writing intensive course that takes a holistic.
Parents Writing Workshop. Aims of session How is writing taught at Seer Green CE School? What elements of writing does my child need to be competent in?
Growth in Grammar Phil Durrant Debra Myhill Mark Brenchley.
KS2 English Parent Workshop November 2016
KS2 English Parent Workshop 21st October 2016
KS2 English Parent Information Monday 31st October 2016
Indian Community Languages Schools Parents and Teachers Conference July 2017.
التوجيه الفني العام للغة الإنجليزية
The Grammar of School-Age Writing Development: What do we Already (Think we Maybe (don’t)) Know? Mark Brenchley Phil Durrant.
Esther Daborn, Anneli Williams & Louis Harrison
What do these mean? Your time is up Ready for anything (Red E)
DPS • English Copyright © 2017 mrshawke.com
1. Review of last Friday (Form, Function, Fluency)
Information for studying GCSE English Language
Systemic Functional Linguistics as a
Words, Phrases, Clauses, & Sentences
UNCERTAINTY CONSTANT CHANGE DYNAMISM IT FLOWS FLEXIBILITY ADAPTABILITY.
TRANSLATION 5. Genre and translation 1 Lingua Inglese 2 LM.
“My Satirical Self” Discuss “My Satirical Self” with your table. What stood out to you? What is the author’s main point? Discuss the article as a class.
English Language Welcome to A Level!.
The Grammatical Basis of Writing Development
Phil Durrant Mark Brenchley Debra Myhill
Development in L1 Written Vocabulary between 6 and 14
The Growth in Grammar Corpus: Corpus Linguistics Progress Goes “Boink”
Academic Writing Style
Grammar Workshop Thursday 9th June.
English Language Proficiency Standards (ELPS)
AICE AS English Language (9093)
Framework for Analysing Children’s Reading Books
LaDeLi Centre for Research in Language Development throughout the Lifespan Second Language Acquisition Research (SLA) and Teacher Education: what should.
The Victorian Curriculum
Phil Durrant Debra Myhill Mark Brenchley
A Level English Language
TEACHING READING Indawan Syahri 12/8/2018 indawansyahri.
Stylistics and Stylometry
Week 3 Warm-Ups English 12 Mrs. Fountain.
Grade 3.
Introducing English.
What is Discourse Analysis
AO1 Read, understand and respond to texts. Maintain a critical style and develop an informed personal response. Use textual references, including quotations,
Language in the Media Lesson 2.
Presentation transcript:

Growing Grammar: Mapping the Dimensions Mark Brenchley Phil Durrant

The Grammatical Basis of Writing Development “Exeter” approach  grammar construed not as an abstract system, but as something deployed in actual pieces of writing How is it deployed? How is is deployed developmentally?

one time ago there was a king called king james the first one time ago there was a king called king james the first. and the catholics did not like him. and there was a bad man called Guy Fawkes he wanted to blow the houses of parliament he wanted to kill the king too. as well as the catholics he hid 36 barrels of gun powder and he hid it. Robert catesby sent a letter to the king. Year 2 (6-7 yrs) I am writing to express my opposition to the article regarding “teenage tearaways” which was recently published in your newspaper. I could not help but notice the considerable bias in the article but I read on, only to witness your reporter put words into your readers’ mouths sentence, after sentence, after sentence. Year 11 (15-16 yrs)

Here Be Dragons? teachers grammar

Here Be Dragons?

Mapping the Terrain Systematic literature review 8,058 initial texts 468 final texts 658 “supplementary” texts Not quite complete but general picture clear

Mapping the Terrain PLENTY OF INDIVIDUAL FINDINGS Phrase Level NP Structure (type and # of modifications) AGE  (Crossley et al. 2011; Ravid & Berman, 2010) QUAL  (Olinghouse & Wilson, 2013)

Mapping the Terrain PLENTY OF INDIVIDUAL FINDINGS Clause Level # Coordinated Clauses AGE  (Veal, 1974) #Adverbial Clauses AGE  (Noyce & Christie, 1985) # Relative Clauses QUAL  (G&F, 1970)

Mapping the Terrain PLENTY OF INDIVIDUAL FINDINGS Discourse “Flow” Subject Opening QUAL  (Myhill, 2008) Non-Finite Adverbial Clause Opening QUAL  (Myhill, 2008) Subject-Verb Inversions

Mapping the Terrain PIECES OF A PUZZLE #1 Variation not necessarily continuous “Continuous”: AGE  - Passives (Hunt, 1965) QUAL  - Coordinated Clauses (Myhill, 2008)

Mapping the Terrain PIECES OF A PUZZLE #1 Variation not necessarily continuous “Pick ups” NP Modification: postgrads>11>7=4 (R&B, 2010) Participial Adjectives: high>medium=low (G&F, 1970) “Drop Offs” Adverbial Clauses: 7=5>3 (O’Donnell et al, 1967) Relative Clauses: high=medium>low (G&F, 1970)

Mapping the Terrain PIECES OF A PUZZLE #2 Shifts of Grammatical Attention NP LENGTH: postgrads>11=7=4 NP ABSTRACTION: postgrads>11>7>4 NP MODIFICATION I: postgrads>11>7=4 NP MODIFICATION II: postgrads>11=7=4 (Ravid & Berman, 2010)

Mapping the Terrain PIECES OF A PUZZLE #3 Two Developmental Strands: “AGE” + “QUALITY” Sometimes align Relative Clauses QUALITY , AGE  (Golub & Frederick, 1970) Modals

Mapping the Terrain PIECES OF A PUZZLE #3 Sometimes don’t Sentences with Adverbial Opening QUALITY: Good=Average=Weak AGExQUALITY: Good>Average>Weak @ 8 Good=Average=Weak @ 10 (Myhill, 2008)

Mapping the Terrain PIECES OF A PUZZLE #3 Sometimes don’t Sentences with Non-Finite Adverbial Clause Opening AGExQUALITY: Good=Average=Weak @ 8 Good>Average>Weak @ 10 (Myhill, 2008)

Mapping the Terrain PIECES OF A PUZZLE #4 Importance of the Wider Diatypic Context Genre: T-Unit Length: A>D>N (Crowhurst & Piché, 1979) Audience: Clause Length: Teacher > Friend (Crowhurst & Piché, 1979)

Mapping the Terrain PIECES OF A PUZZLE #4 Genre: T-Unit Length: AGE @10: A>D>N @6: A>N, A=D, D=N QUAL @ARG: Positive Relationship @NAR: Negative Relationship (Crowhurst, 1980; Crowhurst & Piché, 1979)

Mapping the Terrain PIECES OF A PUZZLE #4 Genre: T-Unit Length: AGE @10: A>D>N @6: A>N, A=D, D=N QUAL @ARG: Positive Relationship @NAR: Negative Relationship AGExQUAL @12: ARG: Positive Relationship NAR: Negative Relationship @6: ARG: No Relationship NAR: No Relationship

Content Words per Clause Mapping the Terrain Content Words per Clause (Berman & Ravid, 2009) Words per Clause (Berman & Ravid, 2009)

Mapping the Terrain PIECES OF A PUZZLE #5 Systematicity? Not just about individual bits of grammar, but how they are interrelated

Mapping the Terrain PIECES OF A PUZZLE #5 Dean & Quinlan (2010) US Essay Writing (Descriptive, Persuasive) @ 4th, 6th, 8th, 10th, 12th grade e.g. “Spoken Style”: mental state/conversation verbs (+ve) first person singular pronouns (+ve) noun/verb ratio (-ve) attributive adjectives (-ve) AGE: @4/6/8/10/12: Negative Association QUALITY: @Persuasive: Negative Association @Descriptive: Positive Association

Mapping the Terrain Fragmentary evidence base, but pieces of underlying puzzle Problematic educationally – how can we support teachers and students in putting all these pieces together more comprehensively? Value of a multi-dimensional approach, grounded in the work of Douglas Biber (1988) Language use can be modeled as a set of core communicative functions that cut across specific instances of language use Each function associated with specific clusters of grammatical features Writing development as students “attaining” and then “better deploying” the appropriate sets of grammatical features for expressing these underlying communicative functions in particular writing contexts

AND NOW FOR SOMETHING NOT COMPLETELY DIFFERENT…

References Berman, R. A. & Ravid, D. (2009). Becoming a Literate Language User: Oral and Written Text Construction across Adolescence. In D. R. Olson & N. Torrance (eds.) Cambridge Handbook of Literacy (92-111). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Biber, D. (1988). Variation across speech and writing. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Crossley, S. A. et al. (2011). The development of writing proficiency as a function of grade level: A linguistic analysis. Written Communication 28(3), 282-311. Crowhurst, M. (1980). Syntactic complexity and teachers’ quality ratings of narrations and arguments. Research in the Teaching of English 14(3), 223-213. Crowhurst, M. & Piché, G. L. (1979). Audience and mode of discourse effects on syntactic complexity in writing at two grade levels. Research in the Teaching of English 13(2),101-109. Dean, P. & Quinlan, T. (2010). What automated analyses of corpora can tell us about students’ writing skills. Journal of Writing Research 2(2), 151-177. Golub, L. S. & Frederick, W. C. (1970). An analysis of children's writing under different stimulus conditions. Research in the Teaching of English 4(2), 168-180.

References Loban, W. (1976). Language development: Kindergarten through grade twelve. Urbana, IL: NCTE. Myhill, D. A. (2008). Towards a linguistic model of sentence development in writing. Language and education 22(5), 271-288. O’Donnell, R. C. et al. (1967). A transformational analysis of oral and written grammatical structures in the language of children in grades three, five, and seven. The Journal of Educational Research 61(1), 35-39. Olinghouse, N. G. & Wilson, W. (2013). The relationship between vocabulary and writing quality in three genres. Reading & Writing 26(1), 45-65. Ravid, D. & Berman, R. A. (2010). Developing noun phrase complexity at school: A text- embedded cross-linguistic analysis. First Language 30(1), 3-26. Veal, L. R. (1974). Syntactic measures and rated quality in the writing of young children. Studies in Language Education, Report 8. Athens, GA: University of Georgia. Harpin, W. (1976). The Second 'R': Writing Development in the Junior School. London: Allen & Unwin. Hunt, K. W. (1965). Grammatical Structures Written at Three Grade Levels. Champaign, IL: NCTE.