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Teaching Writing in 21st Century |
- Sponsored by Dr. Tien Chang Lin Technology Innovation Foundation Limited
Prof. Richard Sterling
Executive Director, National Writing Project, USA
Adjunct Professor, Graduate School of Education,
University of California, Berkeley, USA
For many years, the teaching of writing has been ignored in our schools. The
emphasis on improving student performance in schools has largely centered on the
teaching of reading and the study of mathematics. But writing may make the crucial
difference between a perfunctory education and one that prepares young people for
success both in the university and the workplace. Professor Sterling believes it has
become the crucial skill for the 21st Century. The inclusion of a writing program
implemented across all grade levels and subjects is mostly found in the highest
achieving schools, both public and private. This deficiency regarding the lack of
attention to the teaching of writing led the College Board in the US to form a
Commission on the Teaching of Writing in Americaˇ¦s Families, Schools and Colleges
Their reports, The Neglected R, which surveys the teaching of writing in K-12
schools, and Writing: A Ticket in or a Ticket Out, which surveys the writing needs of
120 major American corporations employing nearly 8 million people, have triggered a
national debate on the importance of writing in the US. In addition, both of the
college admissions testing programs, the SAT and the ACT have added a writing
component, although the ACT is an optional test.
In addition to these changes in assessment, there are some optimistic signs in the
culture of communication today. There has been an explosion of informal writing
outside of the school settings, mostly by young people, and all emerging from the
new uses of technology. Instant messaging, blogs, websites involving videos, digital
photos, music and texts, and digital story telling are filling hours and hours of young
peopleˇ¦s time, all involving a complex series of literacy moves.
It is these contrasting settings that the lecture will address.
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