1 / 20

Reading and “stealing” like a writer: Academic templates for writing close analysis

Reading and “stealing” like a writer: Academic templates for writing close analysis. Margi Wald College Writing Programs University of California, Berkeley mwald@berkeley.edu TESOL 2011 Friday, 18 March New Orleans, LA, USA. The First Assignment. Sustained Attention to Written Text

aleta
Télécharger la présentation

Reading and “stealing” like a writer: Academic templates for writing close analysis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Reading and “stealing” like a writer: Academic templates for writing close analysis Margi Wald College Writing Programs University of California, Berkeley mwald@berkeley.edu TESOL 2011 Friday, 18 March New Orleans, LA, USA

  2. The First Assignment Sustained Attention to Written Text [The essay] should reveal the student’s ability to: interpret the written text in a meaningful, arguable way that is stated or implied as a thesis or main idea. The thesis or main idea is assertive enough so that the student takes a position on the text and does not merely summarize, elaborate without merely repeating ideas, and reflect on the text in an insightful way, not merely critiquing the writing quality, but engaging with themes from the reading.

  3. One Possibility Close Reading or Analysis elaborate without merely repeating ideas, reflect on the text in an insightful way, not merely critiquing the writing quality, but engaging with themes from the reading. Look specifically at the language and structures the author uses to extend a theme and create tone, an effect on the reader -- wording, images, illustrations, allusions, rhythm, contrasts, representations

  4. The Pre-Draft Sequence (1) Read and re-read text. Pull out relevant passages. Model close analysis idea creation (whole group). Practice close analysis (small group).

  5. Close Analysis: Group Modeling An accident of geography sent me to a school where all my classmates were white, many the children of doctors and lawyers and business executives. All my classmates certainly must have been uneasy on that first day of school--as most children are uneasy--to find themselves apart from their families in the first institution of their lives. But I was astonished. The nun said, in a friendly but oddly impersonal voice, 'Boys and girls, this is Richard Rodriguez.' (I heard her sound out:Rich-heard Road-ree-guess.) It was the first time I had heard anyone name me in English. 'Richard,' the nun repeated more slowly, writing my name down in her black leather book. Quickly I turned to see my mother's face dissolve in a watery blur behind the pebbled glass door. Textual Evidence/ Information                     Commentary / Analysis / Explanation accident of geography feels unworthy, mistake to be at the school

  6. The Pre-Draft Sequence (2) Discuss “PIE” arguments/paragraphs Point, Information/Illustrations, Explanation Claims, Evidence, Analysis Examine model paragraph containing close analysis for rhetorical moves. See handout (Rose, Close Analysis Moves) Write first draft.

  7. The First Draft (1) To show his feelings of weakness, Rodriguez also tells the story of going to a gasoline station with his father. He describes his dad’s English: “At one point his words slid together to form one long word—sounds as confused as the threads of blue and green oil in the puddle next to my shoes.”(345) “Slid” shows that his dad has no much control of his tongue. The “blue and green oil” show that his dad’s English is in fact very poor and Rodriguez actually feels uncomfortable about it. Not only his dad, but also himself feels weaker in front of Americans. Rodriguez also describes one time in class, he was being asked, “silent, waiting for the bell to sound, I remained dazed, diffident, afraid.”(347) “Silent” shows that he did not want to answer; he refuses to learn this public language. “Waiting” shows that he is passive, doesn’t want to take a step. “Remained” shows that he had no confidence, no pride and that he was feeling nervous about his public identity. He had no pride in himself before learning English. Feeling weak actually gives Rodriguez the desire to be strong, to gain public identity deeply inside his heart and that leads to his reaction later on when he was pushed to learn English.

  8. The First Draft (2) "This-Shows" Trap  Like Rodriguez, Anzaldúa writes of her inner turmoil. She too feels a need for acceptance by the Anglo educational community. She describes feelings at school: “faceless, nameless, invisible, taunted with ‘Hey cucaracho’ (cockroach). Trembling with fear, yet filled with courage, a courage born of desperation” (p. 326). This shows that, school was uncomfortable but Anzaldúa’s need for acceptance by whites gives her courage and motivates her to gain an education. 

  9. The Approach Model and Notice Student Texts Professional Texts Whole Group Small Group Create ‘Noticing’ Lists Substitutions / Expansion Practice Small Group Revision Peer Response

  10. The Theory Genre-based Derewianka, 2003; Hyland, 2004 & 2009); Tardy 2009 SFL-informed Schleppegrell, 2004; Schleppegrell & Colombi, 2002) Corpus-inspired Not based on frequency, but teaches students the value of noticing / modeling the language / structures used in written texts.

  11. Step 1: Modeling & Noticing (1) How do writers craft sentences of close analysis? From a handout of tips on close analysis: “Pull out and echo the actual words from the quotation. Expand the discussion of those words to show how they work to help support your claim.” Look at models Student: CWR1A essays, MICUSP, NAFWiC, BAWE, Viking corpus Internet samples: close reading, textual analysis Professional: Published articles, COCA

  12. Step 1: Modeling & Noticing (2) Whole Group See handout (Rose, Close Analysis, Language)

  13. Step 1: Modeling & Noticing (3) Small Group Examples from MICUSP, online samples Additional essays from CWR1A students

  14. Noticing: A Sample He depicts the space in which the characters interact as a type of theater, likening the two to “actors in a play.” Naipaul’s use of this metaphor has implications for how one should interpret the forces of colonialism at work in the novel as a whole. http://engl200e.wordpress.com/2008/03/09/two-excellent-example-of-close-reading/

  15. Step 2: Creating templates (1) Share findings MICUSP -- upper division a reader can't help butnote the abundance of euphemisms– “1,” “2,” “3.” By using the term “power” in an unconventional way the sense of comfort that the text creates by using "Be cheerful, sir." Also, the text refers to the spirits as “our actors,” which indicates that The imagery invoked bythe melting spirits reminds the reader of The passage's inclusion of the "globe" along with the fantastical images of the "towers" and "palaces" also indicates CWR1A student essays By using the images of a “dam” and a “reservoir” to describe border regulation, he depicts how immigration is restricted except for when labor is needed by U.S. manufacturing companies. By focusing on “whole families” rather than individuals as the subject, he Moreover, his description of families getting run over as “mowed down” further depicts the scene as horrific and appalling.

  16. Step 2: Creating templates (2) Create substitutions By using the term/phrase/word/adjective/noun The author uses the phrase/word/term/adjective/noun The author’s use of the phrase/word/term/adjective/noun By using symbols/repetition/imagery The author’s use of symbols/repetition/imagery A reader can't help but note/notice the abundance/long list/repetition/repeated use of euphemisms/images/metaphors/adjectives/slanted language

  17. Creating Templates: Samples See handout (Close Analysis Templates)

  18. Step 3: Practicing with templates Small Group Anzaldua discusses her rejection by the dominant Mexican culture as well, presenting the negative view Spanish speakers have of Chicanos: Pocho, cultural traitor, you’re speaking the oppressor’s language by speaking English, you’re ruining the Spanish language,’ I have been accused by various Latinos and Latinas. Chicano Spanish is considered by the purist and by most Latinos deficient, a mutilation of Spanish. (76-77) Individual Work Peer Response

  19. The revised paragraph Being different than Americans caused Rodriguez and his family act uncomfortably in front of the Americans. Rodriguez tells the story of going to a gasoline station with his father. He describes his dad’s English in a negative way: “At one point his words slid together to form one long word—sounds as confused as the threads of blue and green oil in the puddle next to my shoes.” (345). By using the verb “slid”,Rodriguez suggests that his father has no much control of his tongue. The simile of “blue and green oil”further suggests that his dad’s English is in fact very poor and confused. Also, Rodriguez’s use of oil in the puddleimplies that his dad or his family could never mix with the American society. This image hints that Rodriguez did not affirm his dad’s English but actually felt uncomfortable, ashamed about it and that led to Rodriguez’s desire to be shameless. Not only his dad, but also Rodriguez himself felt weaker in front of Americans. Rodriguez describes his reaction when he was in his first day of class at school, noting “silent, waiting for the bell to sound, I remained dazed, diffident, afraid” (347). He was “silent” because he did not want to answer; he refused to learn this public language. He was “waiting” passively, didn’t want to take a step.The fact that he “remained” in a negative state until the end of classindicates that he had no confident, no pride and that he was feeling nervous about his public identity. Before learning English, he had no pride in his public self. Feeling weak actually gave Rodriguez the desire to be strong, to gain a public identity and this led to his reaction later on when he was pushed to learn English.

  20. References Derewianka, B, (2003). Trends and issues in genre-based approaches. RELC Journal, 34 (2). 133-154. Graff, G. & Birkenstein, C. (2006) They say, I say: The moves that matter in academic writing. New York/London: Norton. Hyland, K. (2007). Genre and second language writing. Michigan Series on Teaching Multilingual Writers. Series edited by Diane Belcher and Jun Liu. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. Hyland, K. (2009). Teaching genre in the disciplines—How applied linguistics can help. Second Language Writing / Applied Linguistics Intersection, TESOL. Denver, CO. Michigan Corpus of Upper-level Student Papers (MICUSP). (2009). Ann Arbor, MI: TheRegents of the University of Michigan. North American Freshman Writing Corpus (NAFWiC). (2009). Compiled by Gena Bennett at the Department of English, University of Birmingham, UK. Schleppegrell, M., & Colombi, M. C. (Eds.). (2002). Developing advanced literacy in first and second languages. Mahwah, NJ: LEA. Schleppegrell, M. (2004) Language of schooling. Mawah, NJ: LEA Tardy, C. (2009). Plagiarism vs. legitimate textual borrowing. Workshop presented at The Symposium on Second Language Writing, Tempe, AZ. Viking Corpus of Student Academic Writing, Portland State University, USA. http://web.pdx.edu/~conrads/online_corpus.html

More Related