Scaffolding Singaporean Students to Write Vividly in the ‘Mother Tongue’, Mandarin

This paper details results from a three-year study investigating how to help students in Singapore write vivid compositions in Mandarin, the Chinese ‘mother tongue’. Mastery of the mother tongue by Singaporean students has become an important government priority in recent years. The strategies emplo...

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Main Authors: Tzemin Chung, Neil Anderson, Munkew Leong, Waiyin Choy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: James Cook University 2016-08-01
Series:eTropic: electronic journal of studies in the tropics
Online Access:https://journals.jcu.edu.au/etropic/article/view/3338
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spelling doaj-29b5e60071994f57ac8518de450d8dbe2021-09-16T01:45:35ZengJames Cook UniversityeTropic: electronic journal of studies in the tropics1448-29402016-08-01122Scaffolding Singaporean Students to Write Vividly in the ‘Mother Tongue’, MandarinTzemin Chung0Neil Anderson1Munkew Leong2Waiyin Choy3James Cook UniversityJames Cook UniversityNational University of SingaporeNational University of SingaporeThis paper details results from a three-year study investigating how to help students in Singapore write vivid compositions in Mandarin, the Chinese ‘mother tongue’. Mastery of the mother tongue by Singaporean students has become an important government priority in recent years. The strategies employed by this study included the use of information and communications technologies (ICT) mediated scaffolds such as collaborative mind maps and online peer editing to help students learn micro-writing strategies. This paper outlines the process of using various scaffolds to support students to learn and apply the action chain micro-writing strategy. A class of 31 Primary 4 from a neighbourhood school participated in this study. Findings indicated that students were very enthusiastic about writing in the ICT-mediated environment. Contrary to the teacher’s initial belief, students could be scaffolded to write action chains quickly. Findings highlighted the potential of scaffolding students in learning small chunks of writing strategy in an ICT-mediated environment that enabled them to practice these strategies in their composition writing until they could master and apply them. These micro-writing strategies gradually built up to a complex set of skills, including expressive writing. Moreover, students enjoyed working in groups and editing their peers’ work online. This showed that peers could be engaged as scaffolders in the classroom to free up the teacher’ time, allowing the teacher more time to spend with students who were not performing well.https://journals.jcu.edu.au/etropic/article/view/3338
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tzemin Chung
Neil Anderson
Munkew Leong
Waiyin Choy
spellingShingle Tzemin Chung
Neil Anderson
Munkew Leong
Waiyin Choy
Scaffolding Singaporean Students to Write Vividly in the ‘Mother Tongue’, Mandarin
eTropic: electronic journal of studies in the tropics
author_facet Tzemin Chung
Neil Anderson
Munkew Leong
Waiyin Choy
author_sort Tzemin Chung
title Scaffolding Singaporean Students to Write Vividly in the ‘Mother Tongue’, Mandarin
title_short Scaffolding Singaporean Students to Write Vividly in the ‘Mother Tongue’, Mandarin
title_full Scaffolding Singaporean Students to Write Vividly in the ‘Mother Tongue’, Mandarin
title_fullStr Scaffolding Singaporean Students to Write Vividly in the ‘Mother Tongue’, Mandarin
title_full_unstemmed Scaffolding Singaporean Students to Write Vividly in the ‘Mother Tongue’, Mandarin
title_sort scaffolding singaporean students to write vividly in the ‘mother tongue’, mandarin
publisher James Cook University
series eTropic: electronic journal of studies in the tropics
issn 1448-2940
publishDate 2016-08-01
description This paper details results from a three-year study investigating how to help students in Singapore write vivid compositions in Mandarin, the Chinese ‘mother tongue’. Mastery of the mother tongue by Singaporean students has become an important government priority in recent years. The strategies employed by this study included the use of information and communications technologies (ICT) mediated scaffolds such as collaborative mind maps and online peer editing to help students learn micro-writing strategies. This paper outlines the process of using various scaffolds to support students to learn and apply the action chain micro-writing strategy. A class of 31 Primary 4 from a neighbourhood school participated in this study. Findings indicated that students were very enthusiastic about writing in the ICT-mediated environment. Contrary to the teacher’s initial belief, students could be scaffolded to write action chains quickly. Findings highlighted the potential of scaffolding students in learning small chunks of writing strategy in an ICT-mediated environment that enabled them to practice these strategies in their composition writing until they could master and apply them. These micro-writing strategies gradually built up to a complex set of skills, including expressive writing. Moreover, students enjoyed working in groups and editing their peers’ work online. This showed that peers could be engaged as scaffolders in the classroom to free up the teacher’ time, allowing the teacher more time to spend with students who were not performing well.
url https://journals.jcu.edu.au/etropic/article/view/3338
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AT munkewleong scaffoldingsingaporeanstudentstowritevividlyinthemothertonguemandarin
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