Description

Book Synopsis

Writing development and pedagogy is a high priority area, particularly with standardised testing showing declines in writing across time and through the years of schooling. However, to date there are relatively few texts for teachers and teacher educators which detail how best to enable the children to become confident, autonomous and agentic writers of the future.

Developing Writers Across the Primary and Secondary Years provides cumulative insights into how writing develops and how it can be taught across years of compulsory schooling. This edited collection is a timely and original contribution, addressing a significant literacy need for teachers of writing across three key stages of writing development, covering early (4-7 years old), primary (7-12 years old) and secondary years (12-16 years old) in Anglophone countries. Each section addresses two broader themes â becoming a writer with a child-oriented focus and writing pedagogy with a teacher-oriented focus.

Toge

Trade Review

In a multimodal world, the significance of writing is too easily forgotten. This rich collection of Australian and British action research re-focuses our attention on the instrumental role played by writing development in all aspects of teaching/learning ¬– ranging across sectors, across informing social semiotic approaches and across individual and social perspectives as it does so. A timely reminder for ‘woke’ educators in our Web 2.0 communication age.

Professor J R Martin, Department of Linguistics, University of Sydney, Australia

An increasing body of research into children’s writing performance in recent times has demonstrated how considerable are the changes that occur from early childhood to late childhood, and thence to adolescence and adult life. Written language is quite different from speech, and while children normally commence their schooling with a degree of spoken proficiency, it takes some years of development to master the written code. This volume brings together a timely and useful set of chapters that reveal many of the challenges for children in learning to write before school and in the primary and secondary years. As such, the volume offers valuable insights for teachers at all ages.

Frances Christie, Emeritus Professor of Language & Literacy Education, University of Melbourne, Australia

In a multimodal and complex world, writing development for children and young people remains an imperative in education. Whether writing is conceived as a technical skill and/or a key conduit for personal and social development, it is a key mode for communication in the twenty-first century and has not been replaced by other modes. Rather, it is finding its place in the firmament of communication. This multi-national edited collection is the work of experts in the field who understand the relationship between research, policy and practice, and will be an authoritative guide for years to come.

Professor Richard Andrews, University of Edinburgh, UK

How can classroom instruction support children becoming writers? What pedagogical practices might teachers employ across schooling years to nurture children as writers? The capacity to write well is a critical factor of academic success and productive participation in learning and civic life. This edited volume of classroom research provides a needed resource that expertly addresses the complexity of supporting children becoming writers across time– from fostering emerging writers in the early years, to supporting social, linguistic and cognitive development of primary school writers, to addressing the complexity of writing in secondary schools. Chapters offer accessible accounts of interdisciplinary research with clear implications for pedagogical practices across the years of schooling.

Maureen Boyd, Associate Professor, Department of Learning and Instruction, Graduate School of Education, University at Buffalo, USA

This book is an important contribution to the literature of writing development. It deals with fundamental requirements for developing good writing education: It presents a nuanced understanding of the concept of writing development, it combines perspectives from both linguistics and psychology in a rich array of research, and throughout the book implications for classroom practices are discussed. The book challenges normative approaches and invites the readers to independently reflect on how to meet children’s needs as writers in the complex, multimodal and digital world of today. It will become an influential book in times when accountability and measuring achievements more and more are prevailing.

Synnøve Matre, Professor in Nordic Languages and Literature, Department of Teacher Education, The Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) Trondheim, Norway



Table of Contents

Figures

Tables

Contributors

Foreword

Chapter 1: Developing Writers in Primary and Secondary School Years Debra Myhill and Honglin Chen

Part I: Writing in the Early Years: Fostering Emergent Writers

Chapter 2: Children Learning About Writing in the Early Primary Years Classrooms Lisa Kervin, Barbara Comber and Annette Woods

Chapter 3: Writing Before School: The Role of Families in Supporting Children’s Early Writing Development Cathy Nutbrown

Chapter 4: Bringing More Than A Century of Practice to Writing Pedagogy in the Early Years Susan Feez

Chapter 5: Teaching Writing in Digital Times: Stories from the Early Years Clare Dowdall

Part II: Writing in the Primary Years: Supporting Social, Linguistic and Cognitive Development

Chapter 6: Developing Textual Competence: Primary Students’ Mastery of Noun Groups in Two Factual Text Types Helen Lewis

Chapter 7: Apprenticing Authors: Nurturing Children’s Identities as Writers Teresa Cremin

Chapter 8: Developing Confident Writers: Fostering Audience Awareness in Primary School Writing Classrooms Honglin Chen and Emma Rutherford Vale

Chapter 9: A Pedagogy of Empowerment: Enabling Primary School Writers to Make Meaningful Linguistic Choices Susan Jones

Part III: Writing in the Secondary Years: Growing into Complexity

Chapter 10: Writing their Futures: Students’ Stories of Development and Difference Erika Matruglio And Pauline Jones

Chapter 11: Wordsmiths and Sentence-Shapers: Linguistic and Metalinguistic Development in Secondary Writers Debra Myhill

Chapter 12: Growing into the Complexity of Mature Academic Writing Beverly Derewianka

Chapter 13: Articulating Authorial Intentions: Making Meaningful Connections Between Reading and Writing in the Secondary Classroom Helen Lines

Index

Developing Writers Across the Primary and

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Sat 27 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Honglin Chen, Debra Myhill, Helen Lewis

    15 in stock


      View other formats and editions of Developing Writers Across the Primary and by Honglin Chen

      Publisher: Taylor & Francis
      Publication Date: 3/20/2020 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780367893750, 978-0367893750
      ISBN10: 0367893754

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Writing development and pedagogy is a high priority area, particularly with standardised testing showing declines in writing across time and through the years of schooling. However, to date there are relatively few texts for teachers and teacher educators which detail how best to enable the children to become confident, autonomous and agentic writers of the future.

      Developing Writers Across the Primary and Secondary Years provides cumulative insights into how writing develops and how it can be taught across years of compulsory schooling. This edited collection is a timely and original contribution, addressing a significant literacy need for teachers of writing across three key stages of writing development, covering early (4-7 years old), primary (7-12 years old) and secondary years (12-16 years old) in Anglophone countries. Each section addresses two broader themes â becoming a writer with a child-oriented focus and writing pedagogy with a teacher-oriented focus.

      Toge

      Trade Review

      In a multimodal world, the significance of writing is too easily forgotten. This rich collection of Australian and British action research re-focuses our attention on the instrumental role played by writing development in all aspects of teaching/learning ¬– ranging across sectors, across informing social semiotic approaches and across individual and social perspectives as it does so. A timely reminder for ‘woke’ educators in our Web 2.0 communication age.

      Professor J R Martin, Department of Linguistics, University of Sydney, Australia

      An increasing body of research into children’s writing performance in recent times has demonstrated how considerable are the changes that occur from early childhood to late childhood, and thence to adolescence and adult life. Written language is quite different from speech, and while children normally commence their schooling with a degree of spoken proficiency, it takes some years of development to master the written code. This volume brings together a timely and useful set of chapters that reveal many of the challenges for children in learning to write before school and in the primary and secondary years. As such, the volume offers valuable insights for teachers at all ages.

      Frances Christie, Emeritus Professor of Language & Literacy Education, University of Melbourne, Australia

      In a multimodal and complex world, writing development for children and young people remains an imperative in education. Whether writing is conceived as a technical skill and/or a key conduit for personal and social development, it is a key mode for communication in the twenty-first century and has not been replaced by other modes. Rather, it is finding its place in the firmament of communication. This multi-national edited collection is the work of experts in the field who understand the relationship between research, policy and practice, and will be an authoritative guide for years to come.

      Professor Richard Andrews, University of Edinburgh, UK

      How can classroom instruction support children becoming writers? What pedagogical practices might teachers employ across schooling years to nurture children as writers? The capacity to write well is a critical factor of academic success and productive participation in learning and civic life. This edited volume of classroom research provides a needed resource that expertly addresses the complexity of supporting children becoming writers across time– from fostering emerging writers in the early years, to supporting social, linguistic and cognitive development of primary school writers, to addressing the complexity of writing in secondary schools. Chapters offer accessible accounts of interdisciplinary research with clear implications for pedagogical practices across the years of schooling.

      Maureen Boyd, Associate Professor, Department of Learning and Instruction, Graduate School of Education, University at Buffalo, USA

      This book is an important contribution to the literature of writing development. It deals with fundamental requirements for developing good writing education: It presents a nuanced understanding of the concept of writing development, it combines perspectives from both linguistics and psychology in a rich array of research, and throughout the book implications for classroom practices are discussed. The book challenges normative approaches and invites the readers to independently reflect on how to meet children’s needs as writers in the complex, multimodal and digital world of today. It will become an influential book in times when accountability and measuring achievements more and more are prevailing.

      Synnøve Matre, Professor in Nordic Languages and Literature, Department of Teacher Education, The Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) Trondheim, Norway



      Table of Contents

      Figures

      Tables

      Contributors

      Foreword

      Chapter 1: Developing Writers in Primary and Secondary School Years Debra Myhill and Honglin Chen

      Part I: Writing in the Early Years: Fostering Emergent Writers

      Chapter 2: Children Learning About Writing in the Early Primary Years Classrooms Lisa Kervin, Barbara Comber and Annette Woods

      Chapter 3: Writing Before School: The Role of Families in Supporting Children’s Early Writing Development Cathy Nutbrown

      Chapter 4: Bringing More Than A Century of Practice to Writing Pedagogy in the Early Years Susan Feez

      Chapter 5: Teaching Writing in Digital Times: Stories from the Early Years Clare Dowdall

      Part II: Writing in the Primary Years: Supporting Social, Linguistic and Cognitive Development

      Chapter 6: Developing Textual Competence: Primary Students’ Mastery of Noun Groups in Two Factual Text Types Helen Lewis

      Chapter 7: Apprenticing Authors: Nurturing Children’s Identities as Writers Teresa Cremin

      Chapter 8: Developing Confident Writers: Fostering Audience Awareness in Primary School Writing Classrooms Honglin Chen and Emma Rutherford Vale

      Chapter 9: A Pedagogy of Empowerment: Enabling Primary School Writers to Make Meaningful Linguistic Choices Susan Jones

      Part III: Writing in the Secondary Years: Growing into Complexity

      Chapter 10: Writing their Futures: Students’ Stories of Development and Difference Erika Matruglio And Pauline Jones

      Chapter 11: Wordsmiths and Sentence-Shapers: Linguistic and Metalinguistic Development in Secondary Writers Debra Myhill

      Chapter 12: Growing into the Complexity of Mature Academic Writing Beverly Derewianka

      Chapter 13: Articulating Authorial Intentions: Making Meaningful Connections Between Reading and Writing in the Secondary Classroom Helen Lines

      Index

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