Title of article
Deliberate false provisions: The use and usefulness of models in learning academic writing
Author/Authors
Karen P. Macbeth، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
16
From page
33
To page
48
Abstract
Although models have been a mainstay of academic writing pedagogy for centuries, a recurrent critique has been that they
control or limit student writing and misrepresent the affairs they claim to model. These insufficiencies notwithstanding, models are
ubiquitous in the ordinary, practical world, and their usefulness to novices can easily go unnoticed by experts. Influenced by
ethnomethodology, this study follows the plight of English language learners in an academic writing class as they struggle to follow
instructions for writing their first essay. Findings suggest that for them a model essay provided relief from the vague terms and occult
objects of what was for them a cultural curriculum. The model offered students something they could do to turn in an assignment on
time. Models, however, work by displaying basic principles. They forfeit some things in order to make others vivid, and it is to this
sparseness that they owe their pedagogical value. Students who understood the model as a right answer rather than a case, were led
astray, and they then had to confront the betrayal. Ultimately, discovering the insufficiencies of the model was important to the
students’ development of competent academic writing.
# 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
Keywords
Academic Writing , Novice instruction , Use of models
Journal title
JOURNAL OF SECOND LANGUAGE WRITING
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
JOURNAL OF SECOND LANGUAGE WRITING
Record number
714009
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