Writing is traditionally the least enjoyed part of adult English classes. While much of the time is devoted to listening and reading skills, and some, although not enough, to speaking, writing is often left neglected. However, writing is more than just a mechanical stringing of words into sentences, which often creates anxiety. It supports critical thinking and problem-solving skills, grammar and spelling development, and metalinguistic awareness.
Most adult learners experience language writing anxiety even when they type a sentence in a chat box. The fear of making mistakes can be paralyzing for some students. The irony is that their desire to be perfect too quickly often slows their learning trajectory. If we want to lower our students' affective filter, they must experience low-stakes practice on a regular basis.
Blogging seems to be one of the least threatening solutions to the problem of teaching writing. First, it offers learners greater control over their learning (Grewling & Pinkman, 2005). Learners are free to develop ownership of the third space between home and school, and cultivate their writing skills while creating their own digital space. Second, blogging supports learners' digital literacy skills, especially because more mature students are digital visitors at best. It teaches formatting, inserting an image, and publishing. These skills are invaluable on their own, but even more powerful in combination with writing. Third, learners do not just write for their instructor. They can comment on each other's posts, co-construct their knowledge, and build their learning community (Greenhow & Lewin, 2016).
The best part is that adults live rich lives filled with knowledge and experience. When they are enabled to use their abilities by being given control, writing becomes a tool that helps them learn better.
Image: Google Gemini/Nano Banana2
As an international student who learns English as a foreign language, I agree with what you're saying. Blogging in this course is less intimidating than writing posts on other social media platforms. I think it's because we know we don't criticize each other for bad writing (which I write lol)... haha, but if I had to write posts on my blog where other people who are not in this course can see, I would feel very anxious😬
ReplyDeleteI think writing is hard for native English speakers, too. Back when I was dating, when guys would find out I was an editor, they would immediately apologize for their lack of capital letters or punctuation or shorthand in texts and emails. I was an English and Literature major in college, and I still have some anxiety about it, even after being a textbook editor for many, many years. So, I think the anxiety is an experience of all writers, to some degree or another. I wonder if blogs do provide a "low enough" stakes sort of experience for practice writing, or basically, writing to think. Depending on how the blog is out there in the world, it could potentially be seen by others. I think I'd be suspicious about blogging as a practice space if I had any concern others would see it and judge me in some what for what was there. Sometimes, I think good old analogue composition notebooks, at least for native English speakers, are the way to go. I did "morning pages" for several months after I read a book called The Artist's Way. I've done "thought downloads" for other coaching programs. I make mistakes all the time, and I've learned that most of my writing isn't precious in any way. Plus, there is something to pushing the pen on the paper that drives my own learning more, vs. typing.
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