Sunday 28 October 2018

Humble concoctions: In my Mind's Eye



Sometimes I gather stray thoughts together and I come up with humble things like this:

In my Mind’s Eye

My old mother used to say
If you can’t see the ocean
Behind those pale blue eyes
You are likely blind

And if you can’t feel the heat
In those dying embers
You’ve never been touched
By the divine

Your world is there
And you are forever
Reshaping it only
 In your mind’s eye

Saturday 20 October 2018

Writing as a process: let's get extreme!



Writing at any level in our days has become a burden rather than a time of reflection and quiet introspection.

Technology and its concomitant distractions prevent young -- and more mature -- learners from  concentrating  on the task at hand. I dare say the social media, with their semblance of sociability, cultivate the attitude that being left on our own and to our own devices points to inflicted isolation, which is to be avoided by all means.

Motivating learners to write somehow involves persuading them to rethink the value of spending time alone with their thoughts, and this is not an easy thing to do but definitely worth trying.

A word of warning: I am not advocating a school environment free from technological equipment nor am I in favour of leaving students to deal with a writing task without support from the teacher. What I am saying is that independent thinking also occurs when the students are given time and opportunity to examine a question with the freshness of their own mind.

Writing at an advanced level is an extremely demanding activity as it requires performing many different subtasks. I therefore suggest that the teacher develops a method of guiding the students through the different stages of drafting and editing a piece of writing -- perhaps a different one depending on the nature of the task.

I will now focus on a specific form of writing and suggest an approach which could not only enable the learners to complete the task but would also teach them skills and ways of addressing similar writing tasks while at the same time it will activate their minds.

This is the topic
A sports magazine has invited its readers to write letters on the topic of dangerous sports. You have decided to write a letter (280-320 words) expressing your views about dangerous sports and what you think the responsibilities of the people who do these sports are.
It is a task set in the coursebook Masterclass for the Cambridge Proficiency published by Oxford University.

The first step was to ask the students for a definition of extreme sports to which the answer is typically an activity which carries a high risk possibly incongruous with the pleasure derived from practising it – though the last point is highly questionable.

Although the task seemed and indeed was quite straightforward, the students did not have enough ideas to develop into a 300-word letter, which brings me to the next step.

By focusing on structure and format, coursebooks tend to overlook the dearth of ideas and arguments, which is really the raw material for structuring anything at all. Rather than providing the students with a ready-made model, which is often well beyond their scope and abilities, I consider it a priority to train them to look for information on the Internet. It takes some time to learn the ropes since searching should yield the most relevant results, which requires thinking carefully of the key words of the search.

On this particular occasion I did the search for the students and gave them the links so they could read up. The first text was a New York Times article:
Taking sports to the extreme

The second one was a post from a blog:
Should extreme sports be banned as they put people’s lives at risk

The third one was an article again from The Conversation:
Adrenaline zen: what “normal people” can learn from extreme sports

The most important thing to warn the students about is that the texts they will read are in different formats and styles from what they have been asked to produce, which means that they will have to select the points that they will include in their own writing. They can copy-paste the relevant extracts onto a sheet of paper but the teacher must point out that they have to read the whole texts and then select relevant bits.

When the students had garnered all the relevant information, I gave them my notes, which evidently lay no claim to stylistic uniformity or structural integrity. The important thing is to make it clear to the students that their notes are a bank from which they can draw but not necessarily exhaust. The notes may contain ideas about linking devices which will come in useful later.

Here are the notes I made and passed on to my students as an example of what I was asking of them:


Once they have done the above, they are ready to start the laborious task of organising the ideas in the format required (a letter in this case) and adapting the material collected to their own personal style if their writing is not going to read like a mosaic of different styles and loosely connected ideas.

The final stage is the actual writing. When this is done in class, which it normally is, I make sure that I keep an eye on what each student writes in order to help with phrasing and stop them from wandering off. It is a painstaking process for the students and teacher alike but one that pays off in the long run.
Once they have finished their writing, I usually give the students the end result of my writing. Here is the letter about extreme sports: