English and Media Department gcse writing Skills Objective: Writing to argue Resources



Download 197.03 Kb.
Page3/4
Date23.05.2017
Size197.03 Kb.
#18954
1   2   3   4


Information Texts:

  • Focus pupils minds on information texts i.e. letters communicate information to people, articles might inform and entertain people, essays might express facts, opinions and ideas, travel writing informs readers about places, etc.


Comparing Texts:


  • Give pupils the two information texts, taken from The Independent newspaper.

  • In pairs pupils should discuss the following questions:

  1. What do you learn from text A that you couldn’t really learn from text B?

  2. Which text is more entertaining to read?

  3. What are the advantages of presenting information in sentences and paragraphs, as in text A?

  4. What are the advantages of using lists as in text B?

  5. Why do you think the newspaper uses both types of text side-by-side?

  • Feedback responses.

Language Workshop:


  • Some texts need a chronological sequence – things being told in the order they take place e.g. recipes. Give them a list of other texts and ask them to grade them according to how they organise their material chronologically (1 least – 5 most).

    1. An encyclopaedia article on eclipses

    2. Chapter on WW1 in History textbook

    3. Write-up of a school Science experiment

    4. Personal diary entry

    5. Newspaper column headed Yesterday in Parliament

    6. Railway timetable booklet

    7. Police report of a road accident

  • Look again at the newspaper article and get pairs/groups to come up with a time line of her life on a mini whiteboard.

  • As a class, identify the phrases which indicate a chronological order in the article (i.e. this week, In case, After a year of that, 33 years ago, In 1987, just).

  • Discussion: What are the advantages of using a chronological sequence in an information text? Are there any disadvantages? (e.g. in an biography, starting a different point in the person’s life may be more engaging).


Task:
In Paper 2, Section B (worth 15% of the total mark for English) pupils have to answer one of four questions. A question testing writing to inform will always be one option.
Step 1 – The Question

  • Read the question carefully:

Choose something you are particularly interested in. Write in such a way as to inform someone who knows very little about this topic what it consists of and what makes it interesting.

  • Brainstorm ideas to include. Teacher could record a ‘menu’ on generic ideas on a flipchart e.g. pictures.

  • Think about how it should be written – first, second of third person; active or passive voice; direct speech; adverbials; etc.

Step 2 – Sequencing

  • Pupils sequence their ideas in a way that will help make the article gripping.

  • Write down 5 discourse markers which show sequencing of writing which could be used in the article e.g. The first time…

  • N.B. Sequencing allows the writer to manipulate the order of a story. Placing part of a story out of chronological order to create an effect is a Higher Tier writing skill.


Step Three – Planning and Drafting

Your article should:



  • Write to inform

  • Inform about the interest

  • Inform about what makes it interesting


Step 4 – Writing

Using all the skills covered, pupils write their article informing people about a personal interest.


Step 5 – Peer/Self-Assessment

  • Pupils read their own work critically – Does it do what it’s meant to do? Is it interesting? Is the sequence effective? Have you used an appropriate tone and vocabulary? Etc. Make improvements as appropriate.

And/or



  • Share/swap work with a partner. Make constructive comments and make changes in the light of comments.



Card Sort


Inform

Explain

Describe

Aims to show what something is like in detail

Aims to give the reader facts and opinions

Aims to help the reader understand a process

Letters

Articles

Essays

Travel writing

Autobiography

Leaflets


Text A


Goddess of the moment

By David Lister

Kylie Minogue:



Kylie Ann Minogue was born 33 years ago in Melbourne, the firs child of Carol, a former ballet dancer, and Ron, and accountant. Kylie inherited her looks, blue eyes, wide smile and pop’s most photographed legs, from her Welsh mother. Both are exactly the same height, a millimetre or so above five feet. Between Kylie and her sister Dannii was a brother, Brendan, who also works in London, but for an Australian TV company. They grew up in the affluent eastern suburbs of Melbourne.
Emulating her little sister was what drove the teenage Kylie to answer a press advert wanting young actors for a TV drama, The Henderson Kids. She had already had a couple of small parts on TV, but nothing to approach the fame of her younger sister Dannii, who was a national TV star in Australia. Even now one of Kylie’s websites – though perhaps these days with a hint of irony – is called ‘Dannii’s Sister.’ Dannii, too, was later to become a pop star in Britain, although over here her sister has ruled the roost. The TV director Chris Langman, who cast Kylie in The Henderson Kids, had recalled: ‘She was vulnerable and very shy, and it came across. At the time, Kylie was living in the shadow of her sister, Dannii. I think she found that hard, but it’s possible to be shy, yet driven, and that was Kylie …’
In 1987 Pete Waterman was approached by someone from Mushroom Records in Australia.

They had just signed Kylie Minogue and wanted Waterman to loan them an engineer to help them get Stock Aitken Waterman high-energy sound. Waterman sent Mike Duffy, who got Kylie to do a version of ‘The Locomotion.’ It went to number one, and Duffy advised Waterman to take the girl on full time. Waterman had never heard of Kylie Minogue. He had never watched Neighbours. He said he would take her on and then promptly forgot about it. A few weeks later he got a call from Mike Stock saying there was ‘a small Antipodean in reception expecting to do something with us now.’ Waterman retorted: ‘She should be so lucky’ – which Stock immediately thought sounded like a song. And he started writing the lyrics. Yes, it really does sound like one of ‘those’ pop stories. But the parties concerned maintain it is true. ‘I Should Be So Lucky’ became Kylie’s first British number one. The future Pop Idol judge began to realise he might have chanced on something special. Her debut album sold 14 million copies.



Text B

Born:

Kylie Ann Minogue, Melbourne, Australia, 28 May 1968.

Parents:

Ron (an accountant) and Carol (whose family migrated from Wales in 1955).

Family:

Younger brother Brendan; younger sister Dannii.

School:

Camberwell High, Melbourne.

TV Career:

First role, at the age of 12, in The Henderson Kids, followed by The Sullivans and Skyways; joined Neighbours in 1985; appeared in 542 episodes before leaving in 1988.

Singles:

‘I Should Be So Lucky’; ‘The Locomotion’; ‘Especially For You’ (with Jason Donovan); ‘Got to Be Certain’; ‘Je Ne Sais Pas Pourquoi’; ‘Hand on Your Heart’; ‘Never Too Late’; ‘Tears on My Pillow’; ‘Confide in Me’; ‘Where the Wild Roses Grow’ (with Nick Cave); ‘Spinning Around’; ‘Can’t Get You Out of MY Head’; ‘In Your Eyes.’

Albums:

Kylie (1988); Enjoy Yourself (1989); Rhythm of Love (1990); Kylie Minogue (1994); Light Years (2000); Confide in Me (2001).

Films:

The Delinquents (1989); Streetfighter (1994); Moulin Rouge (2001).

Business:

Her company Kaydeebee owns the rights to all her music; she launched the Love Kylie underwear range in 2001.

Awards:

Australian TV Logie award for best actress (1986); best international female singer and best international album at the Brits 2002.

Autobiography:

Kylie.

Worth:

Approximately £13 million.

Likes:

Flake chocolate bars, flowers and Thai food.

Dislikes:

Brussels sprouts, snails and rudeness.

She says:

‘When I donned the hot pants, I didn’t expect that two years later it would be getting such attention.’

They say:

‘From the first, I thought there was something about her, and if you could bottle it, you’d be a millionaire’ – Pete Waterman.

English and Media Department

GCSE Writing Skills
Objective:

Writing to explain


Resources:

Two descriptions of Internet (total Revision GCSE English)

Oetzi newspaper article (Literacy in Context)

Task sheet


Focus:

Starter:

  • On OHT, look at the two examples of texts explaining the Internet. Discuss the audience and purpose of each supporting ideas with evidence from the texts. (Text A is from a Government Information Society Initiative leaflet, informing the public who know nothing about the use of information technology and how they can find out more. Text B is from Internet Explorer 3 for Windows 95 for Dummies which is meant for people with some knowledge.)

  • Brainstorm other examples of explanation texts e.g. recipes, leaflets, reports, etc.

  • What features might you find in an explanation text? Produce a class list.

Features of an explanation text:



    • general opening statement

    • chronological order

    • might use bullet points rather than sentences and paragraphs

    • might use tables, diagrams, pictures

    • might use imperative verbs (commands) e.g. lift the tin

    • connectives used to relate to the order of things e.g. first, next, then

    • not much description, unless it helps the reader


Shorter Task:

  • Imagine you are explaining how to use a new type of MP3 or DVD player. How would you present the information differently for:

    • someone who has used MP3s/DVDs for several years?

    • someone who has never owned a video or personal stereo?

  • Feedback.

  • Option: Individuals or pairs write up these brief explanations.



Teaching Point:

The most common error in explanatory writing is to assume your reader knows and understands all that you do. Be careful!


Newspaper Article – How Oetzi …

Put class into pairs/small groups to study this article. Read the newspaper article together as a class (or choose another from a current newspaper).


Steps:

Pictures

  • Look at the photograph which accompanies the article. What part does it play in the article? (e.g. attracts reader, adds interest, provides extra information).

Headline

  • What’s the headline’s function in the article? How? (e.g. attract attention, gives key facts, emotive/dramatic language, etc.)

Lead Paragraph

  • Its aim is to gain reader’s attention and then keep it. Must provide reader with important information – who, what, where, when.

  • How is this done in the article’s lead paragraph?

Paragraphs

  • Article is divided into paragraphs (1 or more sentences linked together by one main idea or subject).

  • Look at article – come up with a topic heading for each paragraph.

  • Compare with someone else’s list. Are they different? If so, why?

Pyramid Writing

  • Journalists structure their articles using knowledge that only half the readers will read the whole article. Look at the newspaper article, has the writer used the pyramid? If so, how?



Headline 100% of readers

Lead 70% of readers

Rest 50% of readers




Writing Task:
Imagine you are a journalist who has interviewed someone about his capture by a Bigfoot. Use the notes that you have taken during the interview to write a tabloid newspaper article.
N.B. You may need to recap the style of a tabloid.


  • Pupils should be given time in class or as homework to plan, draft and complete the article.


The Internet (or Net)

The Internet (or Net) is like a huge telephone system linking computers from all over the world. This means that you can make contact with anyone else, anywhere, who is also on the Net. With the right equipment, home computers can connect to the Internet on a normal phone line, often to a local number.


Come on, 9 million?
The plain fact is, no one really knows how big the Internet really is. That’s because no one really owns the Internet. But several organisations make it their business to periodically try to find out how big the Internet is. The science is far from exact, but these organisations are able to come up with pretty reasonable estimates.
The best known of these Internet bean-counters is Network Wizards, which does a survey every year. In January 1996, Network Wizards found that the Internet connected 240,000 separate computer networks and that more than 9.4 million separate computers existed on the Internet. When compared with 1995’s numbers, the 1996 survey shows that the Internet has more than doubled in size in the past year. Or to put it another way, three new computers were added to the Internet every second.
Truth is, estimates such as Network Wizards are probably low. Consider that three of the largest on-line services – America Online, CompuServe and The Microsoft Network – together support more than 10 million users. No one knows exactly how many of these users actually use the Internet. Still, the undisputable point is that the Internet is big – and getting bigger every day. If you find these figures interesting, you can check up on the latest Internet statistics from Network Wizards by accessing its Web site, www.nw.com.



How Oetzi the Iceman was stabbed in the back and lost his fight for life

Rory Carroll in Rome

Scientists have discovered that Oetzi the Iceman, the world’s oldest and best preserved mummy, was engaged in hand-to-hand combat shortly before perishing in the Alps 5,300 years ago.

Two wounds to his right hand and wrist show he was stabbed while trying to defend himself with a dagger against an attacker, bolstering theories that bronze age tribes waged war on mountain peaks. The discovery scotches claims that Oetzi was a human sacrifice and suggests instead that he was a warrior or the victim of an ambush who fought hard to save his life.

Researchers revealed the findings last night from the archaeological museum in the northern Italian town of Bolzano which keeps the mummy in a refrigerated room.

“This is very exciting. It tells us that Oetzi was involved in a battle, or at least hand-to-hand combat of some kind,” Eduard Egarter Vigl, the main caretaker for the corpse, told The Guardian.

A sharp object, possibly a flint-tipped spear or dagger, punctured the base of his thumb, shredding skin and muscle right to


the bone on his wrist. The thumb wound had no scar, meaning it was fresh when the Iceman died.

In the last piece of the jigsaw which started in 1991 when two German hikers found a corpse in an Alpine glacier bordering Italy and Austria. Eleven thousand feet above sea level, it caused a sensation as the astonishing state of preservation held secrets about pre-history.

It is known that he was 46 and in a valley on the Italian side hours before ascending the glacier with an unfinished bow, arrows and a dagger.
This reinforces evidence that Neolithic times were quite violent. From the bones found in the Alps it appears there were battles’
Forensic scientists and archaeologists have become detectives, conceiving and discarding theories about why and how he died. The discovery last year of an arrow blade in his left shoulder showed his death was violent, not the result of drowning, hypothermia or a fall.


Researchers speculated he was a willing sacrifice to appeased the gods or the victim of an accident or a long-range ambush. The injured hand shows instead that Oetzi knew he was in danger and had time to defend himself.

One of the German hikers, Alois Pirpamer, had revealed that Oetzi’s dagger was not beside the corpse, as previously thought, but in his right hand, suggesting the killer was close. The detail emerged when the makers of a Discovery Channel documentary to be broadcast next month introduced Mr Pirpamer to Dr Egarter Vigl. The clue prompted the scientist to re-examine the hand, revealing a 15mm-deep zig-zag wound.

“This reinforces evidence that Neolithic times were quite violent because from the bones found in the Alps it appears there were battles up there,” said Brando Quilici, who directed the documentary.

It is thought Oetzi bled to death after the arrow shattered the scapula and damaged nerves and blood vessels before lodging near the lung.





Imagine you are a journalist who has interviewed someone about his capture by a Bigfoot. Use the notes that you have taken during the interview to write a tabloid newspaper article.
Notes Taken During Interview with Albert Ostman

  1. Ostman – 64 year old retired lumberman from British Columbia

  2. Was on camping trip near Vancouver Island

  3. Found that something had disturbed his supplies and food on two nights in a row

  4. One night was shaken awake to find himself being carried away inside his sleeping bag

  5. The opening of the sleeping bag was held shut – Ostman dragged along the forest ground for maybe 25 miles, nearly suffocating – journey took 3 hours

  6. He was thrown to the ground in a heap, and emerged to find himself in the company of four sasquatches (Bigfeet)

  7. A family: father, mother and a pair of offspring – one male, one female

  8. Adult male over eight feet tall and powerfully built, covered in dark hair all over

  9. The children, though smaller, were still about seven feet tall

  10. The sasquatches chattered amongst themselves in a seemingly intelligent language

  11. Did not hurt or threaten him, but were determined not to let him leave

  12. Their lair inside a small valley enclose by cliffs – adult male stood guard at the only apparent exit

  13. Ostman may have been selected as a prospective mate for the young female

  14. Held captive for six days – formed bond with the younger male, who became fond of sampling Ostman’s snuff

  15. Ostman’s escape: he offered his snuff to the adult male, which dumped the entire container in his mouth – then writhed on the ground in great discomfort. Ostman ran off.


Your article could begin:

A retired lumberman told yesterday about his nerve-wracking six-day ordeal – abducted by a family of Sasquatches!

English and Media Department

GCSE Writing Skills
Objective:

Writing to describe


Resources:

4 examples of descriptive texts (AQA Student Book)

Sample exam answer (AQA Student Book)

Task sheet


Focus:

Starter:

  • Pupils look at the 4 texts which use descriptive writing.

  • Pupils work out the text type of each (e.g. fiction, non-fiction, essay, etc.)

  • Which are the most and least descriptive?

  • Which are the most and least personal?

  • Divide class into four assigning each quarter a different text. In pairs, pupils rewrite the text using no description. Report back. Which words did they delete? Why?


Essential Ingredients for Writing Description:

  • Pupils brainstorm in pairs/groups, then feedback to teacher as a whole class. This agreed list should be displayed and/or given to individual pupils.

  • Teachers may want to give other examples of descriptive writing to pupils to help them.


Possible ingredients:

    • Use as many senses as possible.

    • Use specific details to help the reader visualise the scene – names of products, exact colours, similes, etc.

    • Use a wide range of adjectives and adverbs.

    • Well chosen verbs and adverbs.

    • Appeal to the reader’s emotions to convey a point.

    • It may be objective (describing a dog as large, brown, furry) or subjective (as beautiful, friendly, adorable).

    • As a writer you may be involved or detached.


Directory: learning -> english -> ks3-4-5
learning -> Hynix’s crisis-solving processes and promotion status Micro Finance Minyoung Park Keio University Economics Junior Dongkyun Park Hanyang University Mechanical Engineering Senior Members Minyoung Park
learning -> Case # Samsung Galaxy Series How Samsung Galaxy Became a No. 1 Brand in the World
learning -> The incorporation of mobile learning into mainstream education and training
ks3-4-5 -> Student-Friendly app writing Assessment Focuses – Levels 5 8
learning -> Proposal to Develop the apl in Academia
ks3-4-5 -> English department medium term plan
learning -> Rather than reality informing political decisions, political convenience creates reality in the world of
learning -> Learning Mathematics: Perspectives of Australian Aboriginal children and their teachers Peter Howard

Download 197.03 Kb.

Share with your friends:
1   2   3   4




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page