Senin, 12 Maret 2018

Teaching Writing to EFL Students; The Theory of Process Approach



 Writing in process approaches is seen as predominantly to do with linguistic skills, such as planning and drafting, and there is much less emphasis on linguistic knowledge, such as knowledge about grammar and text structure (Badger and White, 2000: 154). However, many educators advocate a process approach to writing (Harmer, 2007: 326). This is because process approach was considered to be the most successful approach in the history of pedagogical reforms in the teaching of writing (Matsuda: 2003 in Halira and Litinin, 2012: 1). In process approach, a teacher and students play important roles during the teaching and learning process. For the teacher, he or she serves as resource, facilitator, motivator, feedback provider, and evaluator (Widodo, 2008: 102). While for the students, they serves as competent planners, writers, feedback providers of their peers’ work, and editors for their own composition (Widodo, 2008: 103).
 There are some different views on the stages that writers go through in producing a piece of writing. Widodo (2008: 103) states that there are seven main activities in writing process; pre-writing, drafting, responding, revising and editing, assessing, post-writing, and reflection.
1)        Pre-writing
This is an activity that encourages the students to write. Pre-writing is designed to stimulate ideas or thoughts for the students to start writing. The purpose of this stage is to make the students to be able to explore certain topics in unstructured and non-threatening way before working on formal writing. 
2)        Drafting
In this stage, the students are encouraged to develop their ideas into rough draft without considering the grammatical accuracy first. In other words, in drafting, the students are promoted to the fluency of ideas so that they can do the writing task smoothly.
3)        Responding
Responding to the students writing both by the teacher and the students plays important roles in the implementation of process approach. In this stage, the students are also expected to be active and think critically while they are responding their friends’ writing.
4)        Revising and editing
When the students revise the drafts, they review their writing task based on the feedback that is given in the responding stage. In editing, the students are engaged in refining their task as they prepare the final draft for product assessment by the teacher.
5)        Assessing
In this stage, the teacher evaluates the students’ task. The purpose of this phase is to know how well the students’ writing product is.
6)        Post-writing
Post-writing is any activity that the teacher and the students can do with the completed writing task (product). It can be done by publishing online or displaying the writing product on the wall magazine or any media.
7)        Reflection
This stage is done in order to encourage the students to self-evaluate their strength and weaknesses of their writing abilities. Moreover, this phase also encourages the students to think of how they will make improvement foe their writing abilities.
 
 

Seow (2002: 316) states that process writing as a classroom activity incorporates the four basic writing stages-planning, drafting (writing), revising (redrafting), and editing- and three other stages externally imposed on students by the teacher, namely responding (sharing), evaluating, and post-writing.
1)        Planning (pre-writing) is any activity in the classroom that encourages students to write.
2)        Drafting is the stage where the students are focused on the fluency of writing and are not preoccupied with grammatical accuracy or the neatness of the draft.
3)        Revising stage is the stage in which the students review their texts on the basis of the feedback given by the teacher or peers.
Editing is the stage in which the students are engaged in tidying up their texts as they prepare the final draft for evaluation by the teacher. They have to make sure that their texts are grammatically and mechanically correct

Harmer (2004: 5-6) states that process approach comprises of four stages namely planning, drafting, editing (reflecting and revising), and final version (final draft).
1)        Planning
This is a stage where the students plan what they are going to write. It can be done by making detailed notes or jotting some important words.
2)        Drafting
In this stage, the students are encouraged to compose a draft of writing on the assumption that it will be amended later.
3)        Editing (reflecting and revising)
This stage allows the students to have some interaction with the teacher and the other students and see their draft whether it is ambiguous or confusing or not, whether the vocabularies used are correct or not, and whether it is grammatically correct or not.
4)        Final version (final draft)
In this stage, the students have to produce a final draft based on the feedback, comments, and suggestion that they get form editing stage.
Referring back to the discussion of the stages in the process approach, the researcher goes to a conclusion that there are five stages that students go through in producing a piece of writing namely prewriting, drafting, revising, editing, and publishing. 
1)        Prewriting
In this stage, the students have to think about the topic and explore ideas that they are going to write.
2)        Drafting
In this stage, the students have to write a text based on the idea that they have already explored in pre-writing stage.
3)        Revising
In this stage, the students have to check or reexamine the draft based on the feedback that they get from the teacher or their friends.
4)        Editing
In this stage, the students have to make sure that their text is grammatically and mechanically correct.
5)        Publishing
In this stage, the students have to share or publish their writing product.



Khutbah Jum'at: Rezekimu dalam Jaminan Alloh Swt.

 Khutbah I اَلْحَمْدُ لِلهِ وَاسِعِ الْفَضْلِ وَالْاِحْسَانِ،   اَلْكَرِيْمِ الَّذِيْ تَأَذَّنَ بِالْمَزِيْدِ لِذَوِي الشُّكْرَا...