Linguistic choice as empowerment - Teaching rhetorical decision-making in writing

This article addresses the teaching of writing and examines how a rhetorical approach can generate empowerment and agency. In the context of contemporary digital modes of written communication, which have democratised access to wide networks of communication, enabling children to write well has neve...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Debra Myhill
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Örebro University 2019-01-01
Series:Utbildning & Demokrati
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.oru.se/uod/article/view/1121
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spelling doaj-77aa12a8b45d44b3b90367302b9216862020-12-08T11:42:49ZengÖrebro UniversityUtbildning & Demokrati1102-64722001-73162019-01-01282557510.48059/uod.v28i2.11211121Linguistic choice as empowerment - Teaching rhetorical decision-making in writingDebra MyhillThis article addresses the teaching of writing and examines how a rhetorical approach can generate empowerment and agency. In the context of contemporary digital modes of written communication, which have democratised access to wide networks of communication, enabling children to write well has never been more important. Yet school attainment data suggest that writing proficiency is weaker than reading proficiency. Specifically, this article will argue that a rhetorical approach to the teaching of writing helps developing writers to understand how their language choices shape the interaction between authorial intention and the intended reader, and supports young writers in making the transition, noted in research on children’s writing development, from writer-based to reader-based prose. When young writers understand the relationship between linguistic choice and rhetorical effect, they begin to recognize the place of authorship and being an author, allowing writing classrooms to be communities where children can become increasingly agentic, autonomous, and capable writers.https://journals.oru.se/uod/article/view/1121writinggrammarlinguistic choicerhetorical grammar
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Debra Myhill
spellingShingle Debra Myhill
Linguistic choice as empowerment - Teaching rhetorical decision-making in writing
Utbildning & Demokrati
writing
grammar
linguistic choice
rhetorical grammar
author_facet Debra Myhill
author_sort Debra Myhill
title Linguistic choice as empowerment - Teaching rhetorical decision-making in writing
title_short Linguistic choice as empowerment - Teaching rhetorical decision-making in writing
title_full Linguistic choice as empowerment - Teaching rhetorical decision-making in writing
title_fullStr Linguistic choice as empowerment - Teaching rhetorical decision-making in writing
title_full_unstemmed Linguistic choice as empowerment - Teaching rhetorical decision-making in writing
title_sort linguistic choice as empowerment - teaching rhetorical decision-making in writing
publisher Örebro University
series Utbildning & Demokrati
issn 1102-6472
2001-7316
publishDate 2019-01-01
description This article addresses the teaching of writing and examines how a rhetorical approach can generate empowerment and agency. In the context of contemporary digital modes of written communication, which have democratised access to wide networks of communication, enabling children to write well has never been more important. Yet school attainment data suggest that writing proficiency is weaker than reading proficiency. Specifically, this article will argue that a rhetorical approach to the teaching of writing helps developing writers to understand how their language choices shape the interaction between authorial intention and the intended reader, and supports young writers in making the transition, noted in research on children’s writing development, from writer-based to reader-based prose. When young writers understand the relationship between linguistic choice and rhetorical effect, they begin to recognize the place of authorship and being an author, allowing writing classrooms to be communities where children can become increasingly agentic, autonomous, and capable writers.
topic writing
grammar
linguistic choice
rhetorical grammar
url https://journals.oru.se/uod/article/view/1121
work_keys_str_mv AT debramyhill linguisticchoiceasempowermentteachingrhetoricaldecisionmakinginwriting
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