Children as Designers of Texts: Punctuating Persuasive Writing

Main Article Content

Roger Beard
Dr. Andrew Burrell

Abstract

Framed within literacy education and applied linguistics, children’s playful punctuation is considered within a paradigm of ‘writing as design’. Drawing particularly on the work of Sharples (1999), the article examines data from a repeat design study of 9–11 year old children tackling a persuasive description task. The data showed evidence of children making plans, setting goals and satisfying constraints to fulfil communicative effect. As well as being testament to children’s ingenuity in using punctuation in creative ways, the findings have implications for how the writing process is conceptualised and for how writing is taught.

Article Details

Section

Research Article

Author Biography

Dr. Andrew Burrell, UCL IoE

Dr. Andrew Burrell is an experienced early years and elementary school teacher. 
He has an MA and PhD from the UCL Institute of Education, where he has 
also worked in initial teacher training and on several research projects focusing on 
children’s language and literacy development. He has published widely, both 
in professional and research journals and was co-author with Roger Beard of Language Play and Children's Literacy (UCL Press). 

References