1 / 9

Code Switching

Code Switching. When to say what. Code Switching. Code switching is the ability to change your use of language based on the unique situation Three Codes Informal Semi-formal Formal/Academic. Informal Writing. This is anything that is going to just your friends

awentia
Télécharger la présentation

Code Switching

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. Code Switching When to say what

  2. Code Switching • Code switching is the ability to change your use of language based on the unique situation • Three Codes • Informal • Semi-formal • Formal/Academic

  3. Informal Writing • This is anything that is going to just your friends • Includes friend-to-friend emails, letters, love letters, texting, etc. • Things you can do here: text/IM-lingo, bad spelling, incomplete sentences, not capitalizing letters, bad punctuation, etc. • Pretty much anything you want

  4. Example of Informal Writing Late 2 class g2g, c u latr Lol sum freshy fell tryin 2 get 2 class in 20 sec 2day is a gr8 day teachrs r in a good mood cuz passin times r shorter I h8 the ppl that just stand around durin passin time & dnt move. (Courtesy of Jackie Pfitzenmeier)

  5. Semi-Formal Writing • Writing that will be seen by the general public but includes a lot of your own personal opinion • Example: opinion columns, editorials, you-to-teacher/boss emails • Things you can do here: use the word I, you, we (all personal pronouns), properly spell and punctuate slang, use occasional sentence fragments, use a lot of short paragraphs • Things you may not do: texting/IM lingo, use bad spelling, use bad grammar, use bad punctuation

  6. Example of Semi-Formal Writing • In my opinion, passing periods should be cut from 5 minutes down to 30 seconds. Why? Well, I’ll tell you. For one thing, students will have to tear around school to get to class on time. Tearing=Running. And running=getting in shape. Can you say, “Good-bye gym class?” I think so.

  7. Formal/Academic Writing • Writing that will be seen by the general public and/or is written for an academic setting • Examples: school essays, research papers, professional journals, professional reports, etc.

  8. You must: Use proper grammar Use proper spelling Use proper paper format Type it Use appropriate vocabulary You must not: Use 1st and 2nd person personal pronouns (I, we, us, you, your, etc) Use slang words, phrases, or spelling Rules for Formal/Academic Writing

  9. Example of Formal Writing • Passing periods between classes should be cut from five minutes to thirty seconds. At first, this might not seem like a good idea, but if one stops to consider the implications, one would see that this is a perfectly good idea. For one thing, if the school eliminates four minutes from each of the seven passing periods (twenty-eight minutes) then school could end a half an hour early.

More Related