Recommendation 2
(continued)
E X A M P L E 2.8.
Demonstrating that key features of exemplars vary by form, purpose, and audience
Form
Purpose
Audience
Key features emphasized
News article
To inform readers
about an event
Adult general public
Supporting details about the
event and its impact on the
community; quotes from
eyewitnesses
Research brief
To inform readers
about the research
behind an idea,
event, or concept
Practitioners who need
the information for back-
ground or for research pur-
poses (e.g., meteorologists),
or who need to convey or
translate the information
to another audience such
as the general public
More extensive points and
more supporting detail than
a news article
Research paper
Same as a research
brief, but using
more extensive
research evidence
to inform readers
Other researchers
Extensive points and sup-
porting detail; might aim
to use facts, statistics, and
research to explain human
interest stories and/or tech-
nical causes of the event
Fiction/literary
non-fiction
To create interest
in a person or
people
Readers who like human
interest stories (the general
public)
Compelling lead-in sen-
tence; quotes from different
sources; details that appeal
to the reader’s emotions
Blog post
To convey an
opinion
General public
Message tailored to the
blog’s target audience; a
compelling introduction;
concise language to deliver
key points
Emphasize that key features of text types
may vary or may be more or less prominent
based on the purpose, audience, and form
of the writing (see Example 2.8). Have students
brainstorm how the same topic could be written
about in different types of texts. Share differ-
ent forms of writing—news articles, research
briefs, research papers, testimonials, and
fictionalized accounts—about a specific topic,
such as Hurricane Katrina, to illustrate how
the same content is treated differently to
better suit the audience or purpose. Strate-
gies like RAFT may help facilitate compare/
contrast activities, as RAFT prompts students
to think about the writer’s Role, the Audience,
the Format of the writing, and the Topic of
the writing.
67
Have students read an exemplar of a specific
text type, and ask them to emulate different
features of that text (tone, style, etc.) as they
write. In Example 2.9, the student is given the
prologue to Romeo and Juliet and is asked to
mimic the style of the original prologue on a
topic of his or her choice, a “Copy/Change”
activity. This activity gives students practice
in evaluating the key features of texts and
incorporating them into their own writing.
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