Text Types
Text Types
WRITING
IS AN ACTIVITY THAT SUPPORTS STUDENTS TO ANALYZE AND SYNTHESIZE THEIR DISCRETE KNOWLEDGE OF LANGUAGE ITEMS INTO A TEXT THAT IS ACCEPTABLE IN AN ENGLISH WRITING CONVENTION USING THE APPROPRIATE TEXT STRUCTURE / ORGANIZATION
SIMPLE DESCRIPTION WITH VISUALS PARAGRAPH COMPLETION SENTENCE BUILDING WITH COHESIVE DEVICES SHORT MESSAGES ANNOUNCEMENT DESCRIPTION RECOUNT NARRATIVE PROCEDURE EXPOSITION
DESCRIPTION
LANGUAGE FEATURES
Use of simple present tense Use of attributive and ephitets (e.g. adjectives)
generic structure: R E C O U N T
ORIENTATION
: provides the setting (when & where) and introduces participants/character (who) EVENTS : tell what happened, in temporal sequence RE-ORIENTATION (optional) : closure of events (e.g. comments or conclusion)
RECOUNT
IS USED TO TELL PAST EXPERIENCE (what we or someone did, what took place) TYPES: - Personal recount ( retelling of an
activity that the speaker/writer has been personally involved) e.g. oral anecdote, diary entry, biography - Factual recount (recording the particulars of an incident e.g. police report, news report) - Imaginative recount (taking on an imaginary role and giving details of events) e.g. a day in the life of
generic structure: N A R R A T I V E
ORIENTATION : sets the scene (when & where) and introduces participants/character (who) COMPLICATION : a crisis arises, something happened unexpectedly RESOLUTION : the crisis is resolved, for better or for worse RE-ORIENTATION : closing to the narrative (optional)
NARRATIVE
IS
USED TO ENTERTAIN, that is to gain and TO TEACH and INFORM writers reflections
on experience
CAN
Specific, often individual participants with defined identities. Major participants are human, or animals with human characteristics. Action verbs/material processes Verbs that refer to what the human participants said, felt, thought (verbal and mental processes) Past tenses Dialog often included and the tenses change according to the circumstances
generic structure: R E P O R T
GENERAL CLASSIFICATION : tells what the phenomenon under discussion is DESCRIPTION : describes the phenomenon in terms of parts, qualities, habits or behaviors
REPORT
IS USED TO DOCUMENT, ORGANIZE AND STORE FACTUAL INFORMATION ON A TOPIC IS USED TO CLASSIFY AND DESCRIBE THE PHENOMENA OF OUR WORLD TO TALK ABOUT A WHOLE CLASS OF THINGS, e.g. Bikes, Plants, Animals, Phones Examples: news reports, science reports, weather reports
Generalized participants: a whole class of things (volcanoes, newspapers, the royal family) Action verbs/material processes Simple present tense Language for defining, classifying, comparing, contrasting (are called, belong to, can be classified as, are similar to, are more powerful than) May contain technical vocabulary Is written in a formal and objective style
generic structure: P R O C E D U R E
GOAL
:purpose of doing something MATERIALS : things needed to realize goal STEPS : things to do to realize goal
PROCEDURE
IS USED TO INFORM AND TO DIRECT SOMEONE ON HOW TO DO or MAKE SOMETHING, or HOW TO ACHIEVE A GOAL A very important genre in a society because it enables people to get things done Is commonly used in the oral and written mode Examples: recipes, games rules, appliance manuals, directions to reach a destination, instructions to do something
Exposition (Hortatory)
To persuade the reader or listener that something should or should not be the case The reader or listener is persuaded to agree with the writers or speakers point of view/thesis Examples: letters to the editor, newspaper editorials, political speeches
THESIS
introduces topic and indicates writers position. And give outlines of the arguments to be presented.
ARGUMENTS
restates main arguments and elaborate them with supports, evidence, facts, etc.
REITERATION
restates writers position
Analytical Exposition
To persuade the reader or listener that something is the case To analyze a topic and to persuade the reader that this opinion is correct and supported by arguments Examples: argumentative essay, exploratory essay
ABSTRACT
signals the retelling of an unusual incident
ORIENTATION
sets the scene (when & where)
CRISIS
provides details of the unusual incident
REACTION
reaction to crisis
CODA (optional)
reflection on or evaluation of the incident
ANECDOTE
To share with others an account of an unusual or amusing incident Deals with something unexpected or out of the ordinary It is the unexpected events which makes the story worth telling Almost exclusively used for oral genre
Short, telegraphic information about story captured in headline Use of material processes/action verbs to retell the story or event Use of projecting verbal processes in Source stage (e.g. the police said; the witness thought ) Focus on circumstances (e.g. last night, just this morning, at that time, etc)
EXPLANATION
To explain the processes involved in the formation or workings of natural or socio cultural phenomena To give reasons why things are they are Examples: texts in science or social studies
Focus on generic, non-human participants (e.g. clouds, rains, the air, moisture, gas, petrol, oil, urbanization, flood, tornado) Use of simple present tense Use of temporal conjunctions (e.g. before, first, then, in the end, finally) Use of causal conjunctions (e.g. if, when, until, so, as, why)
REVIEW
To
critique an art work, event for a public audience. Examples: movies, TV shows, books, plays, operas, recordings, exhibitions, concerts and ballets