Pre-writing strategies have been hailed as the best introductions to teach the students the process approach. We know that the majority of our students rely on background knowledge that we provide in order to efficaciously analyse and interpret a question especially when it comes to writing. Our responsibility then lies not in just providing the students with the knowledge in isolation to enable the students to be able to apply these concepts in their real life situations. The articles under unit four address a need that has become one that is in high demand and that is the need to instruct the children on the different pre-writing strategies that the students can use in order to generate more thought and to be able to organise the information that they are thinking of so that the piece that they are writing will flow and have meaning for the reader. Our task as teachers lies not only in instructing the students on the strategy but choosing the best strategy that caters to the needs of the students.
As teachers, we have at our disposal several strategies that can be used to help the students to master the writing process. Our focus should not be to have the students write only for a product and then dismiss the information. We must strive to mould our students into critical thinking beings. Prewriting strategies such as free-writing, brainstorming and questioning, together with the use of graphic organisers all help to sustain and nourish the students’ information about the writing process. The use of these strategies helps to engage the students in their learning and helps them to become cognizant of the benefits if using these strategies as a form of pre-writing. The provision of these strategies helps provide the students with a bank of information on strategies that they can use to help them get started when one strategy that they are using does not work.
I am particularly fond of the blind writing strategy. This strategy, a form of free-writing, allows the students to write down their thoughts without interruptions such as spell checks and grammatical and punctuation errors. This is done on the computer (another plus because students use the computer much more than the traditional paper and pencil in completing assignments). Through this means, the students are able to write down the thoughts as they come and then to edit, re-order or truncate as necessary. This strategy would be an effective tool in the classroom because I think that the students would not feel burdened by writing proper sentences or complete thoughts. Furthermore, I realise that this strategy can be used with having the students count their ideas from the free-writing- (Sloan 2010)- (after they have edited of course). This serves as an excellent motivational tool for the students because it is very rewarding to be singled out for good constructive ideas that one makes in a classroom.
Furthermore, I never really realised how effective using graphic organisers can be. I realise how much I use it as a writer when brainstorming on what I want to cover in my discourse but it seems as if I never remembered to impart the knowledge of this wonderful organiser to my students to help them brainstorm and generate thought on the information that should be in their written piece as advocated by Gatz (2004). I sometimes feel that perhaps my students are not advanced enough to make use of such a strategy never realising how much I was belittling the students in my underestimation of their abilities as writers. I have come to realise that it is imperative that we, to the best of our ability, provide opportunities for the students to build on their schema of writing strategies if we want to teach them how to become good writers. They must be able to and have opportunities to practice, practice, and practice! (Sloan 2010). According to Lee (2007), using graphic organisers will help them students to better organise their thoughts on a particular topic. This would allow them to see the necessary relationships between the concepts they have written down if any exist and to use the organisers to develop these concepts like with the use of the fishbone graphic organiser or the spider organiser. I believe that these organisers are ingenious in their design to aid the students. These organisers should be taught in the classrooms to help the students think for themselves and to self-regulate their writing. I must admit that I have been delinquent when it comes to using this strategy in my classroom. In fact, I was only exposed to these graphic organisers at advanced level and to some degree at Teachers’ College. I simply thought that my students were not ready to use this. After reading these articles and seeing what the students can benefit from their use, I am certainly singing a different tune.
Another key point that the articles highlighted and that I found to be rather interesting and very suitable to my experience as a teacher is that of having to have a plan of action to have the students participate as much as possible in the writing process and having the national standards as the floor for instruction. As teachers, we have a tendency to put the instruction of the English curriculum in a box and teach the children for an exam. From my readings, I have realised that this is the worst kind of instruction because we only end up teaching the students how to write a product instead of teaching them how to be critical lifelong writers. We must move away from the banal aspirations and expectations of the traditionalists who advocate for a continuance of the traditional means of teaching. New advances in research into student performance reveal that students learn differently and as a result, we must learn to be flexible in the methods that we choose for instructing the students. I know that previously, I would set the stage for writing by choosing the topics instead of integrating the students’ personal interests and choices. I now realise that an inclusion of this would motivate the students to write especially students in a classroom of mixed ability.
To conclude, the strategies presented in the articles have changed my thinking so much so that I am eager to go back to the classroom and correct my erroneous beliefs. It is time to realise that instructing writing should not be static but provide avenues for dynamic and interesting lessons. As teachers, we must refrain from teaching for an exam but instead teach the students to be critical lifelong writers. As much as possible, in the construction of our units and lesson plans, we must try to incorporate the students’ interests and take into considerations their differing abilities. We must be flexible enough to know what strategies can be used to ensure maximum student internalisation and utilisation of knowledge of strategies. However, it is impossible to teach what we do not know. We must be able to be good writers and have adequate knowledge of the different writing strategies if we are to help the students to become good writers. The onus is on us to brush up on our knowledge of teaching and to keep abreast with the new and current trends in writing instruction if we want to ensure that we instruct the students to the best of our ability. We must be able to collaborate with other teachers and professionals in the field so that we can gain the needed knowledge to instruct the students. This MUST be done in order to help our students succeed as lifelong critical writers.