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phenomenon that requires more than control of syntactic and lexical
items;
identifying topic structures in authentic texts and narrowing down a
topic to match the writer‘s world knowledge;
explaining chronological and logical sequences, making ―point
outlines,‖ and examining formats for various academic
assignments;
paying attention to the lexical and morphological structures of edited
texts and discussing rhetorical differences between English academic
prose and students‘ L1.
Pedagogical suggestions resulting from an empirical study on the native-
speaking reader‘s expectations of the second sentence following a topic sentence
include discussing the second sentence functions, developing the skills to predict
an appropriate second sentence, and identifying the
problems of inappropriate
second sentences.
Overall, researchers supporting contrastive rhetoric hypotheses recommend
making rhetorical differences explicit, raising students‘ awareness of such
differences, and acculturating students through language exercises with concrete
models that meet audience expectations. With an assumption of clear cultural
differences in rhetorical conventions, these pedagogical
suggestions tend to be
prescriptive. The explicit teaching of clearly defined written forms of language is
also promoted on various fronts; e.g., a conservative movement of back-to-basics,
a genre-based approach to literacy in Australia, resistance to Whole Language and
process writing approaches from African American and Native American
perspectives, and Freeman critical literacy. It is important to understand the
politics of explicit language teaching, or any other pedagogy, that contains varied
purposes and motivation for strategically achieving a certain educational or
political aim.
Explicit teaching of the forms of standard language as seen in the back-to-
basics movement or traditional pedagogy that has a transmission and
assimilationist orientation reflects the functional view of literacy. This approach
75
views literacy as consisting of merely basic writing and decoding skills that can be
taught in a hierarchical manner from simple to complex. Language is decomposed
into parts and each part is taught explicitly through drills and exercises. By
contrast, pedagogy favored by Delpit
104
, which she argues fails to provide African
American and Native American students with the linguistic
tools necessary for
success in the dominant society. Explicit teaching from this point of view seeks to
uncover the structural forms of dominant language so that minority learners can
access social and cultural power. The aim is not assimilation but rather
empowerment of the disadvantaged. The Australian genre approach demonstrates a
somewhat similar view to Delpit‘s in that it is a movement against liberal
humanistic approaches to literacy and is concerned with the social success of
disadvantaged students. Although the genre approach has undergone a shift in
focus, one original goal described by scientists
105
was
to empower students,
particularly those marginalized, by explicitly teaching the linguistic structures of
socially, economically, politically, and culturally influential genres. The genre
approach, however, has become transmission-oriented when implemented in the
classroom and is criticized for treating genres and linguistic forms as the status quo
rather than critiquing them as well as the unequal social relations that foster them.
This
tendency, according to Luke, perpetuates the privileged status of what is
defined as the genre of power and renders this approach similar to a functional
approach to teaching literacy.
By contrast, a Fagan approach
106
to literacy advocates acquisition and
appropriation of the dominant language
to reclaim marginalized voices, history,
and culture. Aiming for social transformation through providing literacy education
to the oppressed, a Fagan perspective regards teaching the dominant forms of
language as an important tool for this transformative project. Critical literacy
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Delpit, L., (1988). The silenced dialogue: Power and pedagogy in educating other people‘s children.
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