The role of grammar in the writing curriculum: A review of the literature
Myhill, Debra; Watson, Annabel Mary
Date: 8 December 2013
Article
Journal
Child Language Teaching and Therapy
Publisher
SAGE
Publisher DOI
Abstract
For most Anglophone countries, the history of grammar teaching over the past fifty years is one of contestation, debate and dissent: and fifty years on we are no closer to reaching a consensus about the role of grammar in the English/Language Arts curriculum. The debate has been described through the metaphor of battle and grammar ...
For most Anglophone countries, the history of grammar teaching over the past fifty years is one of contestation, debate and dissent: and fifty years on we are no closer to reaching a consensus about the role of grammar in the English/Language Arts curriculum. The debate has been described through the metaphor of battle and grammar wars (Kamler 1995; Locke 2005), frequently pitting educational professionals against politicians, but also pitting one professional against another. At the heart of the debate are differing perspectives on the value of grammar for the language learner and opposing views of what educational benefits learning grammar may or may not accrue. At the present time, several jurisdictions, including England and Australia, are creating new mandates for grammar in the curriculum. This article reviews the literature on the teaching of grammar and its role in the curriculum and indicates an emerging consensus on a fully-theorised conceptualisation of grammar in the curriculum.
School of Education
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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