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English in Education
Research Journal of the National Association for the Teaching of English
Volume 34, 2000 - Issue 2
109
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Original Article

Reading-Writing Connections: the Importance of Interactive Discourse

(Reader in Language and Literature in Education)
Pages 35-44 | Received 28 Jun 2008, Accepted 07 Apr 2010, Published online: 01 Mar 2018
 

Abstract

Margaret Meek (1988) has described how children borrow ideas from literature through ‘unteachable’ lessons. In this article, I examine how children’s written work is enhanced through ‘teachable’ lessons, where the teacher draws attention explicitly to aspects of literary texts and where children explore and evaluate literature through group reading and discussion. The ways in which children transfer the knowledge of literary devices, gained through group discussion, to their own writing are examined. The relationship between group evaluations of texts and children’s writing development is explored with reference to the work of Year 6 children. This illustrates how critical reading and group discussion can raise primary children’s metalinguistic awareness and develop their understanding of the stylistic features of narrative texts.

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