The writing conundrum: A teacher’s attempt to resolve issues relating to the teaching of writing in the contemporary English classroom.

In this dissertation, I share my reflections on the complexities of teaching writing in the contemporary secondary English classroom. I consider literature which highlights that writing is rarely fully understood and that this, combined with the pressures of accountability measures and policy reform...

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Main Author: Fairbrother, Josephine
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2018
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56406/
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author Fairbrother, Josephine
author_facet Fairbrother, Josephine
author_sort Fairbrother, Josephine
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description In this dissertation, I share my reflections on the complexities of teaching writing in the contemporary secondary English classroom. I consider literature which highlights that writing is rarely fully understood and that this, combined with the pressures of accountability measures and policy reforms has led to a problematic reliance on teaching decontextualized ‘skills’ rather than developing students’ ability to craft content and meaning independently. In turn I argue that this is particularly damaging for students from low socio-economic backgrounds or who are considered to be ‘low-ability’ as they are less likely to internalise these aspects in another setting. From my reading, I take the position that writing is a personal, social and contextualised act that has the potential to be incredibly powerful if taught in such a way. As such, I maintain that to not teach writing from this position is to deny students access to the powerful realms where it is a dominant form of expression and communication – reinforcing the links between the teaching of writing and social justice. To underline these claims, I collect a range of quantitative and qualitative data regarding students’ perceptions of writing and their perception of themselves as writers which demonstrate the apathy and low aspiration which occur if writing is only ever undertaken as a school-based task. I then use this to generative suggestions for alternative ways to approach the teaching of writing in a more holistic manner, as well as calling for teachers to more actively address students’ identity as writers in the classroom.
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spelling nottingham-564062020-05-07T14:16:58Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56406/ The writing conundrum: A teacher’s attempt to resolve issues relating to the teaching of writing in the contemporary English classroom. Fairbrother, Josephine In this dissertation, I share my reflections on the complexities of teaching writing in the contemporary secondary English classroom. I consider literature which highlights that writing is rarely fully understood and that this, combined with the pressures of accountability measures and policy reforms has led to a problematic reliance on teaching decontextualized ‘skills’ rather than developing students’ ability to craft content and meaning independently. In turn I argue that this is particularly damaging for students from low socio-economic backgrounds or who are considered to be ‘low-ability’ as they are less likely to internalise these aspects in another setting. From my reading, I take the position that writing is a personal, social and contextualised act that has the potential to be incredibly powerful if taught in such a way. As such, I maintain that to not teach writing from this position is to deny students access to the powerful realms where it is a dominant form of expression and communication – reinforcing the links between the teaching of writing and social justice. To underline these claims, I collect a range of quantitative and qualitative data regarding students’ perceptions of writing and their perception of themselves as writers which demonstrate the apathy and low aspiration which occur if writing is only ever undertaken as a school-based task. I then use this to generative suggestions for alternative ways to approach the teaching of writing in a more holistic manner, as well as calling for teachers to more actively address students’ identity as writers in the classroom. 2018-12 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56406/1/Fairbrother_Josephine_Dissertation_Parry.pdf Fairbrother, Josephine (2018) The writing conundrum: A teacher’s attempt to resolve issues relating to the teaching of writing in the contemporary English classroom. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)]
spellingShingle Fairbrother, Josephine
The writing conundrum: A teacher’s attempt to resolve issues relating to the teaching of writing in the contemporary English classroom.
title The writing conundrum: A teacher’s attempt to resolve issues relating to the teaching of writing in the contemporary English classroom.
title_full The writing conundrum: A teacher’s attempt to resolve issues relating to the teaching of writing in the contemporary English classroom.
title_fullStr The writing conundrum: A teacher’s attempt to resolve issues relating to the teaching of writing in the contemporary English classroom.
title_full_unstemmed The writing conundrum: A teacher’s attempt to resolve issues relating to the teaching of writing in the contemporary English classroom.
title_short The writing conundrum: A teacher’s attempt to resolve issues relating to the teaching of writing in the contemporary English classroom.
title_sort writing conundrum: a teacher’s attempt to resolve issues relating to the teaching of writing in the contemporary english classroom.
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56406/