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Articles |
Reshaping ESL students' perceptions of writing
Linda Lonon Blanton is Associate Professor in the Department of English at the University of New Orleans (Louisiana). She is the former Coordinator of ESL and the current Chair of Freshman English there. She obtained her Ph.D. in linguistics from the Illinois Institute of Technology (Chicago). In addition to teaching English in New Orleans and Chicago, she taught for two years in Tunisia under the auspices of die US Peace Corps. She has published four ESL composition textbooks and an article on reading in The ESP Journal. Another of her interests is the study of American English dialects.
ESL students bring to their courses perceptions about writing that work against their becoming proficient writers. They often respond to each act of writing as if it were a test, thereby denying themselves psychological and intellectual space to work with written language. Students impatiently await the time when they can get it right. One of our jobs as ESL composition teachers is to interact with our students in a variety of roles to allow them to perceive the development of their ability to write as the muftifaceted, gradual, and organic process that it is. This article outlines a multistep writing programme in which students participate in the writing process and relate to their fellow writers (both classmates and teacher) in a number of different ways. Each of these ways is described in terms of the activities involved, and the degree to which writing proficiency is increased and students' anxiety about themselves as writers is reduced.