Abstract :
Adolescent writers in second language settings often spend the majority of their school days in content area courses, such as
math, science, and social studies, where they must negotiate challenging literacy tasks in their second languages with little
explicit writing instruction. While genre scholars have built an extensive body of knowledge about texts and textual practices
across disciplines, little is known about how linguistically diverse secondary students and their teachers understand schoolbased
writing in different content areas. Taken from a larger ethnographic study of adolescent second language writers’
negotiation of writing tasks across the curriculum, this article explores the ways in which four students and their teachers
describe their expectations for content area writing tasks assigned and completed in humanities and biology courses. Based upon
interviews, classroom observations, and student texts, this article suggests that adolescent L2 writers and their teachers in this
study vary in their descriptions of content area writing, that students may or may not see themselves in the writing roles that
teachers envision for them, and that there are both social and linguistic issues underlying students’ decisions to use certain types
of language on writing tasks. These findings suggest that adolescent L2 writers would benefit from content area writing
instruction that draws upon content area teachers’ existing expertise and encourages discussion among teachers and students
about writing.
Keywords :
Adolescent L2 writers , Secondary education , Language minority students , Genre , Content area writing