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Chapter
Five
Implications
and Suggestions
5. The present study traces the developments in the area of teaching and testing written English, from ancient days to the present and devises effective techniques and materials, which are suited to our situation. There is enough evidence to believe that the techniques used in the study (3.2.4.a to g) and the materials tried out (Appendix 7a and b) will be effective in secondary schools of Gujarat. However to use these techniques and materials teachers may require a certain amount of orientation and hence some of the observations made during the experiment are recorded in the following sections. 5.1
Implications for teaching writing 1.
The present study reveals that in the teaching of writing as it is done
today, learners are engaged in the writing activities for the sake of writing,
in other words, there is no specific purpose (1.3.2 and appendices 4 and 6).
As against this when learners have to write for a specific purpose (3.2
and appendix 9) the task generates a more genuine response. 2.
Composition work as it is undertaken today is mostly teacher controlled.
Teacher assigns the topic, asks a certain number of questions based on
the topic, makes the learner practice the answers to these questions orally and
then makes him write a composition (1.3.2.c).
Here according to the learners, the teacher is the intended reader.
They are also aware of the responses expected from them by the teacher.
The passages and even letters written by the majority of the learners
match word for word (appendix 4a, b, and c).
As against this when learners made to realize that one message can be
conveyed in a number of ways and are made to think more of appropriacy rather
than accuracy (3.2.4 f), they produce
better pieces of written work (Appendix 9a). 3.
When learners are assigned writing tasks like a ‘Visit to a Zoo’
merely because there is such a visit described in the course book, learners
produce write – ups which are
reproductions of course book lessons (Appendix 4b and c).
They mechanically write sentences like ‘We enjoyed our visit to the
Zoo’ even if they have not actually visited a zoo.
Writing activities become more meaningful when the learners are set
realistic writing tasks within the constraints of the classroom situation, like
working in pairs to collect information about each other and record it (Task 2)
or writing letters to each other in class (task 6).
When learners are given a chance to express their own ideas and feelings
they reveal their ability to produce better pieces of writing which bear the
stamp of individuality (Task 7). 4. When learners are given questions in a particular order, the answers of which written in the same order go to make a paragraph (1.3) learners do not get practice in writing ‘texts’, wherein to form a meaningf | |