TEACHING WRITTEN SKLLS COMMUNICATIVELY | Page 48

2.1.4. Description and justification The lesson is organized in pre-, while-, and post-, writing activities (see lesson plan, appendix II) 2.1.4.1. Pre-writing activities Pre-writing activities aim at giving students the chance to see writing as an act of communication presenting them with a context for writing similar to what happens in real life. They also provide students with the necessary language input which they need in order to perform the writing task. More specifically: Task 1 (see appendix III) presents students with a model text similar to the one they will be asked to write. Students are motivated to read the text as it comes from their Comenius partner school in Wales. The distance between the two schools helps students appreciate writing as a means of communication between people who are away from each other. Task 2 (see appendix III) introduces new vocabulary by asking students to match some words to pictures. The role of this activity is both to help students comprehend the text and to pre-teach some vocabulary for the needs of the writing task which will follow. The pictures used facilitate comprehension. Task 3 (see appendix III) makes students become aware of the language used in recipes which is the language for giving instructions. Without being made explicit, the use of imperative is presented contextualized as a vehicle for expressing a certain communicative need. The students underline the verbs in the text and examine their form and their place in each sentence. In this way they realize that a certain meaning is expressed through a certain grammatical form. Thus grammar is acquired within a meaningful context and as a need to communicate. Task 4 (see appendix III) introduces students to the way independent sentences are combined using coordinating conjunction and. This is one of the commonest ways through which coherence is signaled. The task has two stages. First students are asked to identify instances of sentence combining in the model text and then they are asked to practice on some examples themselves. Task 5 (see appendix III) introduces new vocabulary items and exposes students to the use of imperative for giving instructions