Dilemmas and discourses of learning to write: Assessment as a contested site
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Date
2009
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National Council of Teachers of English
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Abstract
Writing assessment is a contested site where competing discourses overlap and invoke conflicting expectations, creating dilemmas for teachers who want to do what they believe is best for children and fulfill their school’s writing targets. A critical look at assessment quandaries reveals surface dilemmas as clashes between overlapping discourses, freeing teachers to work with and against institutions that create the dilemmas and their immobilizing effects. To illustrate how competing discourses generate assessment dilemmas, I analyze data examples from emergent writing activity by a group of children at a kindergarten writing table, looking closely at the students’ and teacher’s actions through the lenses of several prevalent discourses that explain early writing development: maturation discourse, skills mastery discourse, intentionality discourse, multimodal genre discourse, social practices discourse, and sociopolitical discourse (adapted from Ivanic, 2004).
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Copyright © 2009 by the National Council of Teachers of English. Used with permission.
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writing, assessment, elementary, kindergarten, discourse analysis, early literacy, early childhood
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Wohlwend, K. E. (2009). Dilemmas and discourses of learning to write: Assessment as a contested site. Language Arts, 86(5), 341-351.
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