Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Item

Why school English needs a 'Good Enough' grammatics (and not more grammar)

Macken-Horarik, Mary Rose
Citations
Google Scholar:
Altmetric:
Abstract
At the dawn of a national curriculum for English in Australia, grammar has appeared without any serious interrogation of the terms of its re-entry and against ambiguous evidence about its value for teaching writing. What kinds of knowledge about language do teachers need in rhetorically productive teaching? This article investigates the potential of Halliday’s notion of grammatics for understanding students’ writing as acts of meaning in context. Drawing on systemic-functional linguistics, I show how teachers can assess writing achievement using ‘big picture’ tools like genre, register and ‘small picture’ tools like Expansion. I apply these tools to two student texts that call for attention to creative uses of language and to excursions and to difficulties with logic and coherence. The paper concludes that a ‘good enough’ grammatics will enable teachers to recognize playful developments in students’ texts and also to foster their control of literate discourse.
Keywords
national curriculum, grammar, systemic functional linguistics, grammatics
Date
2012
Type
Journal article
Journal
Changing English
Book
Volume
19
Issue
2
Page Range
179-194
Article Number
ACU Department
Relation URI
Source URL
Event URL
Open Access Status
License
File Access
Controlled
Notes