Improving college students' reading and writing by combining reading and writing Improving college students' reading and writing by combining reading and writing

As a teacher of EFL at UFSC since 1975, I have observed semester after semester the difficulties that students in the Department of Foreign Languages and Literature have in reading and especially inwriting not only at the beginning but at more advanced stages when they are close to graduating. I hav...

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Main Author: Loni Kreis Taglieber
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina 2008-04-01
Series:Ilha do Desterro
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/desterro/article/view/8266
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spelling doaj-f55bc52ccfb3490b92c92deb1c60026c2020-11-24T23:46:30ZengUniversidade Federal de Santa CatarinaIlha do Desterro 0101-48462175-80262008-04-01029039051Improving college students' reading and writing by combining reading and writing Improving college students' reading and writing by combining reading and writingLoni Kreis TaglieberAs a teacher of EFL at UFSC since 1975, I have observed semester after semester the difficulties that students in the Department of Foreign Languages and Literature have in reading and especially inwriting not only at the beginning but at more advanced stages when they are close to graduating. I have also observed that these students have little interest in reading and writing in a foreign language either inside or outside the classroom. Conversations with my fellow
 teachers confirmed that they had observed the same weaknesses in their students and that they shared my concerns about this problem.
 Students who are preparing to be teachers of a foreign language should have a reasonable command of the four language skills—speaking, understanding, reading, writing—by the time they graduate. For those who wish to continue their training in English by doing graduate work, competence seems even more important as good reading and writing skills are the sine qua non for engaging in graduate work. As a teacher of EFL at UFSC since 1975, I have observed semester after semester the difficulties that students in the Department of Foreign Languages and Literature have in reading and especially inwriting not only at the beginning but at more advanced stages when they are close to graduating. I have also observed that these students have little interest in reading and writing in a foreign language either inside or outside the classroom. Conversations with my fellow
 teachers confirmed that they had observed the same weaknesses in their students and that they shared my concerns about this problem.
 Students who are preparing to be teachers of a foreign language should have a reasonable command of the four language skills—speaking, understanding, reading, writing—by the time they graduate. For those who wish to continue their training in English by doing graduate work, competence seems even more important as good reading and writing skills are the sine qua non for engaging in graduate work. http://www.periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/desterro/article/view/8266English LanguageEnglish
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Loni Kreis Taglieber
spellingShingle Loni Kreis Taglieber
Improving college students' reading and writing by combining reading and writing Improving college students' reading and writing by combining reading and writing
Ilha do Desterro
English Language
English
author_facet Loni Kreis Taglieber
author_sort Loni Kreis Taglieber
title Improving college students' reading and writing by combining reading and writing Improving college students' reading and writing by combining reading and writing
title_short Improving college students' reading and writing by combining reading and writing Improving college students' reading and writing by combining reading and writing
title_full Improving college students' reading and writing by combining reading and writing Improving college students' reading and writing by combining reading and writing
title_fullStr Improving college students' reading and writing by combining reading and writing Improving college students' reading and writing by combining reading and writing
title_full_unstemmed Improving college students' reading and writing by combining reading and writing Improving college students' reading and writing by combining reading and writing
title_sort improving college students' reading and writing by combining reading and writing improving college students' reading and writing by combining reading and writing
publisher Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina
series Ilha do Desterro
issn 0101-4846
2175-8026
publishDate 2008-04-01
description As a teacher of EFL at UFSC since 1975, I have observed semester after semester the difficulties that students in the Department of Foreign Languages and Literature have in reading and especially inwriting not only at the beginning but at more advanced stages when they are close to graduating. I have also observed that these students have little interest in reading and writing in a foreign language either inside or outside the classroom. Conversations with my fellow
 teachers confirmed that they had observed the same weaknesses in their students and that they shared my concerns about this problem.
 Students who are preparing to be teachers of a foreign language should have a reasonable command of the four language skills—speaking, understanding, reading, writing—by the time they graduate. For those who wish to continue their training in English by doing graduate work, competence seems even more important as good reading and writing skills are the sine qua non for engaging in graduate work. As a teacher of EFL at UFSC since 1975, I have observed semester after semester the difficulties that students in the Department of Foreign Languages and Literature have in reading and especially inwriting not only at the beginning but at more advanced stages when they are close to graduating. I have also observed that these students have little interest in reading and writing in a foreign language either inside or outside the classroom. Conversations with my fellow
 teachers confirmed that they had observed the same weaknesses in their students and that they shared my concerns about this problem.
 Students who are preparing to be teachers of a foreign language should have a reasonable command of the four language skills—speaking, understanding, reading, writing—by the time they graduate. For those who wish to continue their training in English by doing graduate work, competence seems even more important as good reading and writing skills are the sine qua non for engaging in graduate work.
topic English Language
English
url http://www.periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/desterro/article/view/8266
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