Learning the language of school history: the role of linguistics in mapping the writing demands of the secondary school curriculum
C. Coffin. Journal of Curriculum Studies, 38 (4):
413--429(August 2006)
Zusammenfassung
This paper reports on a research study which used the tools of functional linguistics to illuminate the writing requirements of the history curriculum in the context of Australian secondary schools. It shows how the resulting linguistic description was integrated into a sequence of teaching and learning activities through collaboration between linguist specialists and content/pedagogic specialists. These activities were designed to facilitate students? writing skills whilst simultaneously developing their historical knowledge. An independent evaluation of the approach pointed to positive changes in teachers? attitudes and behaviours regarding the role of language in learning history. Equally, students? writing improved, particularly in terms of its organisation and structure.
Beschreibung
Learning the language of school history: the role of linguistics in mapping the writing demands of the secondary school curriculum - Open Research Online
%0 Journal Article
%1 oro5529
%A Coffin, Caroline
%D 2006
%J Journal of Curriculum Studies
%K 2016_E852 CorpusLinguistics Curriculum HistoryLesson Literacy Writing discourseanalysis sfl
%N 4
%P 413--429
%T Learning the language of school history: the role of linguistics in mapping the writing demands of the secondary school curriculum
%U http://oro.open.ac.uk/5529/
%V 38
%X This paper reports on a research study which used the tools of functional linguistics to illuminate the writing requirements of the history curriculum in the context of Australian secondary schools. It shows how the resulting linguistic description was integrated into a sequence of teaching and learning activities through collaboration between linguist specialists and content/pedagogic specialists. These activities were designed to facilitate students? writing skills whilst simultaneously developing their historical knowledge. An independent evaluation of the approach pointed to positive changes in teachers? attitudes and behaviours regarding the role of language in learning history. Equally, students? writing improved, particularly in terms of its organisation and structure.
@article{oro5529,
abstract = {This paper reports on a research study which used the tools of functional linguistics to illuminate the writing requirements of the history curriculum in the context of Australian secondary schools. It shows how the resulting linguistic description was integrated into a sequence of teaching and learning activities through collaboration between linguist specialists and content/pedagogic specialists. These activities were designed to facilitate students? writing skills whilst simultaneously developing their historical knowledge. An independent evaluation of the approach pointed to positive changes in teachers? attitudes and behaviours regarding the role of language in learning history. Equally, students? writing improved, particularly in terms of its organisation and structure. },
added-at = {2016-11-17T02:30:09.000+0100},
author = {Coffin, Caroline},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/251ddffb8386d2c5be94eb776e8c5a7f4/tm353},
description = {Learning the language of school history: the role of linguistics in mapping the writing demands of the secondary school curriculum - Open Research Online},
interhash = {e97fa5f434255f581e707ab3069f419d},
intrahash = {51ddffb8386d2c5be94eb776e8c5a7f4},
journal = {Journal of Curriculum Studies},
keywords = {2016_E852 CorpusLinguistics Curriculum HistoryLesson Literacy Writing discourseanalysis sfl},
month = {August},
number = 4,
pages = {413--429},
timestamp = {2016-12-05T20:22:51.000+0100},
title = {Learning the language of school history: the role of linguistics in mapping the writing demands of the secondary school curriculum},
url = {http://oro.open.ac.uk/5529/},
volume = 38,
year = 2006
}