Title: From Reading to Writing
1From Reading to Writing
- Julia Wan
- Consultant, Creative English Teaching
- Lecturer, Department of English Language
- Literature, Hong Kong Baptist University
2The Importance of Reading
3- Students must be encouraged to read more so they
will be stimulated to write
4William Faulkner (Novelist, Nobel Prize in
Literature, 1949)
- Read, read, read. Read everything . . . And see
how they do it. Just like a carpenter who works
as an apprentice and studies the master. Read!
Youll absorb it. Then write. - Read different kinds of books, learn how writers
write, and then we write.
5As children learn to write
- They learn the use of language for
self-expression - They learn more about themselves (their concerns)
and the world around them (values, life )
6Amy Lowell (writer)
- In writing, I frequently stop to read aloud what
I have written, although this is really hardly
necessary, so clearly do the words sound in my
head. - Teach children to read their own writing aloud
7When we teach reading, we should teach children
words meaning of the material
- Read the material
- shared reading ? supported reading ? independent
reading - Predict pronunciation phonics work?
- Talk about the material
- Understand meaning of the material predict
meaning? - Understand meaning of the writer relate to life?
To self? - Learn a few words very well
- word building enlarge vocabulary
- pronouncing, spelling can predict spelling?
phonics work? put in sentences
8After reading the material
- We can teach the children to write/ write
creatively - We can link the material that the children have
read with the topic that they are writing
9If we wanted the children to write with more
color excitement, teach them how to add power
to their writing
- Teach more adjectives
- E.g. pretty, beautiful, attractive, good-looking
- Teach more verbs
- E.g. walk, run, roll, skip, glide
- Teach the use of figurative language
- E.g. as pretty as an angel, walk like an elephant
10From reading to writing
- I. Language Textbook
- E.g. Primary 1
- Unit 4 What Animals Can you See?
- (Longman Express 1B)
11After teaching the materials, grasp every
opportunity for the children to write
- Words label pictures
- Short sentences
- Put short sentences together to form a meaningful
paragraph
12Label the picture recall/ revise/ build up new
vocabulary
- Classroom
- laminate the picture
- Classroom
- group activity
- Home
- individual activity
- Students should label as much as they can
- cow, tree, eye, pink, house
132. Talk about the picturechildren express what
they know orally
- There is a little boy in the picture.
- He is scratching his head. Why do you think he is
scratching his head? - Perhaps, he sees something that he does not
understand. What is it? - Do you see that the animals are doing something
funny? What are they doing?
143. Talk and write the answer (E.g. Let us
look at the cow first )
- What color is the cow?
- The cow is brown.
- Is he big?
- He is big.
- What is he doing?
- He is reading/ sitting on a chair.
- What is he reading?
- He is reading a newspaper.
- Is the newspaper colorful? What colors are there?
- The newspaper is colorful. There are yellow,
green and pink colors. - Do you think he is happy?
- I think he is happy.
- ----------------------------------------------
- Can you write down ONLY the answers on another
piece of paper?
154. Write down the answers without the questions
- The cow is brown.
- He is big.
- He is sitting on a chair.
- He is reading a newspaper.
- The newspaper is colorful. There are yellow,
green and pink colors. - I think he is happy.
165. Put the sentences into a paragraph
- The cow is brown. He is big. He is sitting on a
chair. He is reading a newspaper. The newspaper
is colorful. There are yellow, green and pink
colors. I think he is happy.
17From reading to writing