Teaching interactive writing with ICT tools


introduction

I have been teaching English as a foreign language in secondary schools in Tunisia for many years. Although I have always used stimulating strategies to encourage my students to write and have motivated them in various ways to produce good writing: letters, poems, short stories, articles, quizzes…, I was well aware of their reluctance to write as an activity. regularly and their anxiety every time they got their papers back. It was obvious that they would rather do something more enjoyable than a task that they considered difficult, tiring and boring!

In discussing this issue with my colleagues, I discovered that they were facing the same problems with their students, and some of them desperately admitted to having resorted to neglecting and avoiding this activity in their English classes. Either they left it to the end of the session due to time constraints or it was given as homework. Therefore, the writing is neglected and ignored.

No wonder our students are bad at writing and have bad grades! To remedy such an alarming situation, we need to readjust and update the techniques we have been using and question our personal attitude towards writing. It is hoped that the various changes that Information and Communication Technologies bring to the field of education will be of great help and offer a wide range of interactive tools to anticipate the main problems of students and make writing a more interactive and enjoyable experience.

II- Writing and ICT

The more we use interactive ICT tools to teach writing, the more enthusiastic, positive, motivated, passionate and committed we become. Consequently, we are able to transmit this passion to our students. Therefore, writing is no longer a passive, tiring, boring and frustrating task, but should be:

* considered as a natural way to communicate.

* naturally linked to oral language and reading

* both an individual and shared experience.

* an interactive experience.

* challenging and fun.

* Promoted by ICT.

When students write to their peers in other countries, writing is no longer a simulated classroom activity, but a means of exchanging personal information, a way of reporting and learning about other people’s schools, environments, and cultures. . The procedure is simple: students receive a letter and then answer it. Communication through writing becomes as natural as communication through speech.

There are electronic dictionaries for all levels of learners. Students can refer to them at all stages of writing to check spelling, grammar, vocabulary…

They can also use forums, chat to communicate with other people through writing.

There are writing programs, such as Storybook Weaver and Writers Workshop, for the promotion of creative writing. These programs allow students to create text with the help of background images. Some of them read aloud the text that students have created, while others give students the opportunity to read their text and hear their own voice.
Creating web pages with FrontPage Editor, DreamWeaver or any other web editor is a more advanced and rewarding way to encourage students to write and publish their work on the web.

Teachers have the possibility to assign many activities in which computer work is combined with non-computer work, for example, planning a tourist brochure by first discussing it in a group, writing the text in a Word program, finding supporting images to illustrate , letting others see the write up and give feedback before reviewing and editing the text and finally making a web page out of it.

The possibilities are enormous and the imagination has no limits.

III- Writing activities that we can teach with ICT

There is a wide variety of ICT-based activities that we can choose from; they can be online or offline. As teachers, we are called to adapt them to the level of our students and to the context:

* Simple sentences

* Enriched sentences

* Descriptions after a reading activity

* Letters / Emails

* Postal cards

* Items

* Interviews

* Reports

* Advertisements

* End of stories

* Beginning of stories

* Stories

* Cartoon

* poems

IV- Writing Tools on the Web

There are programs that help students create their own writing activities. Others generate phrases, poems, quotes, stories…

* Play with words, creating interactive writing games. You can choose the plot, the setting, the character… After finishing, you can print and email your writing: http://www.writingfix.com/

* Publication of students’ writings: poems, short stories, journal writing… http://www.amphi.com/~pgreenle/EEI/studentpublish.html [http://www.tooter4kids.com/classroom/writing4kids.htm/]

* You can have fun and learn to write English sentence patterns with random/automatic sentence generators: http://www.manythings.org/sm/ (you can use it even when you are offline).

* You can generate your poem or story using some programs.

* You can download some free software on your PC or CD and use it to write sentences, quotes, stories: http://www.writesparks.com/

Conclusion V

To help our students improve their writing skills and be more positive, there are important things to remember:

*Simple word or phrase level activities are recommended to provide young learners with basic skills and the opportunity to build their confidence in writing.

* It is important at all times that the teacher shows willingness to write with and for the students, thus acting as a model and inspiration for their written language.

* With ICT, communication through writing becomes as natural as communication through speech.