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Uncharted but breathtaking: Integrating written chat into writing class

The following is being written in preparation for a demonstration at TESOL 2009. It will be held on Mar. 28, 2009 at 11:00 AM, in the Colorado Convention Center Rm. 401. It is a Demonstration (#142337) for the Second Language Writing Interest Section. You are welcome to attend! This site is unfinished and will be updated as time permits. -Thomas Leverett, CESL, Southern Illinois Univ., Carbondale IL USA 62901-4518.

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Summary (50 words)

Writing teachers, aware of the changing definition of communicative fluency and eager to prepare students for a digital future, will recognize the need for teaching students to respond fluently, quickly and appropriately in writing. This session explores ways to integrate written chat as a medium into standard writing class contexts.


Session description (300 words)

The digital era has redefined communicative fluency, since it is difficult to separate language from the cultures of its users, or the environments that it occurs in. Students generally recognize the value of learning the skills that are associated with functioning effectively in digital environments; for example, learning to upload and edit written work in weblogs, learning to send and respond to e-mails appropriately, and learning to function effectively in chat contexts (Guess, 2008). On the rapidly changing technological frontier, chat, which is often associated with distance learning or with less academic social contexts, is rapidly expanding in every context, including business and diplomacy, and students rightfully expect to need the skills associated with it in their future; among these skills are the ability to respond quickly and appropriately, in writing, to a live and rapid chat stream. But these fluency-oriented skills may be unfamiliar to teachers; teaching semi-formal chat fluency requires, first, getting a measure of operational fluency oneself, not only with the technology and the places where it can be accessed, but also with the conversational nature of chat as a written medium. This demonstration will show how a busy teacher can, first, become more familiar with the medium, then integrate it successfully in a writing class, one which may already have a full schedule of more traditional objectives, and a full docket of essays, research papers, and exams as output.
Bibliography

Guess, A. (2008, Oct. 2). Understanding students who were born "digital". Interview with John Palfrey. Inside Higher Ed. http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2008/10/02/digital. Accessed 10-08.

Guess, A. (2007, Sept. 17). Students' evolving use of technology. Inside Higher Ed. http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2007/09/17/it. Accessed 10-08.

Leverett, T. (2007). brb: Using chat in an esl/efl writing class. From Teaching writing in online and paper worlds, TESOL 2008.


Uncharted but breathtaking: Introduction

Other sources

  • Chat in ESL bibliography; part of Web as a Medium bibliography (CESL)
  • where u at w/chat weblog


  • [ CESL ][ Tom Leverett's weblog ]


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    Thomas Leverett, CESL, SIUC