Article published In: Australian Applied Language Studies
Edited by Tim F. McNamara
[Australian Review of Applied Linguistics 10:2] 1987
► pp. 163–181
An overview of the genre-based approach to the teaching of writing in Australia
Published online: 1 January 1987
https://doi.org/10.1075/aral.10.2.10ham
https://doi.org/10.1075/aral.10.2.10ham
Abstract
A significant educational development that has occurred in Australia in recent years has been the emergence of the genre-based approach to the teaching of writing. The theoretical basis of this approach lies in the systemic, functional model of language developd by M.A.K. Halliday and others. Thus it is an approach to writing which focuses on the relationship between written texts and the contexts in which written texts are produced.
This paper traces the development of the genrebased approach. It discusses the meaning of the term “genre”, and describes the contribution of people such as Kress, Martin, Rothery and Christie to the theoretical development of the approach. It also describes some of the educational programs that have been developed to implement the genrebased approach.
It is argued in this paper that the most significant contribution of the genre-based approach to writing is the development of an explicit understanding of the role of language in the educational context and a linguistic description of the major genres that children are expected to learn as they learn to write. It is in this area, that is, making the role of language explicit, that the genre-based approach differs most from other approaches such as the “growth model” of English teaching and “process writing” which have been influential in recent years.
References (57)
Barnes, D., J. Britton and H. Rosen (1971) Language, the learner and the school. Harmondsworth, Penguin.
(1982) Prospect and retrospect: selected essays of James Britton. Edited by Gordon M. Pradl. London, Heinemann Educational.
Christie, F. (1984a) Young children’s writing development: the relationship of written genres to curriculum genres. In B. Bartlett and J. Carr (eds.) Language in education conference: a report of Proceedings. Brisbane, Brisbane C. A. E., Mount Gravatt campus.
(1985a) Language and context: the development of meaning. Paper delivered to the Fourteenth New Zealand Conference on Reading, Nelson, N. Z., August 1985.
(1985b) Some current issues in first language writing development. Australian Review of Applied Linguistics 18,2:27–54.
(1985c) Curriculum genres: towards a description of the construction of knowledge in schools. Paper presented at the Working Conference on Interaction of Spoken and Written Language in Educational Settings. University of New England, November 1985.
(1986a) Setting the context: language in education. Paper presented at a conference on E. S. L. in mainstream education, convened by the Commonwealth Schools Commission, Canberra, June 1986.
(1986b) Learning to write: where do written texts come from? Keynote paper given at the Twelfth Australian Reading Association Conference on Text and Context, Perth, July 1986.
(to appear) The construction of knowledge in the junior primary school. In L. Gerot and T. van Leeuwen (eds.) Language and socialization: home and school. Sydney, School of English and Linguistics, Macquarie University.
(to appear) The question of genres. In I. Reid (ed.) Set of Occasional Papers. Geelong, Deakin University.
Eggins, S., P. Wignall and J. R. Martin (1986) The discourse of history: distancing the recoverable past. Working Papers in Linguistics No. 51. Department of Linguistics, University of Sydney.
Graves. D. (1984) A researcher learns to write: selected articles and monographs. London, Heinemann.
Gray, B. (1985) Helping children to become language learners in the classroom. In M. Christie (ed.) Aboriginal perspectives on experience and learning: the role of language in Aboriginal education. Geelong, Deakin University Press.
(1986) Aboriginal literacy: some implications of genre for literacy development. In Painter and Martin (1986): 188–208.
Hammond, J. (1986) Writing for different purposes with young E. S. L. students. In R. D. Walshe, P. March and D. Jenson (eds.) Writing and learning in Australia. Melbourne, Dellasta Books.
(1987) Process or genre in teaching E. S. L. students to write. Paper presented at the Fifth A. T. E. S. O. L. Summer School, Sydney, January 1987.
Hasan, R. (1978) Text in the systemic functional model. In W. U. Dressier (ed.) Current trends in text linguistics. Hamburg, Helmut Buske.
(to appear) Genre in social theory of language: a reply to John Dixon. In I. Reid (ed.) Set of Occasional Papers. Geelong, Deakin University.
Martin, J. R. (1984a) Types of writing in infants and primary school. In L. Unsworth (ed.) Reading, writing and spelling: proceedings of the Fifth Reading/Language Symposium. Sydney, Macarthur Institute of Higher Education.
(1984b) Systemic functional linguistics and an understanding of written text. In B. Bartlett and J. Carr (eds.) 1984 Language in Education Workshop. Brisbane, Brisbane C. A. E., Mount Gravatt Campus.
(1985b) Process and text: two aspects of semiosis. In J. D. Benson and W. S. Greaves (eds.) Systemic perspectives on discourse: selected theoretical papers from the Ninth International Systemic Workshop. Norwood, N. J., Ablex.
(1986a) Prewriting: oral modes for written texts. In R. D. Walshe, P. March and D. Jensen (eds.) Writing and learning in Australia. Melbourne, Dellasta Books.
(1986c) Genres and language learning: writing as a social process in an infants school. Keynote paper delivered at the Twelfth Australian Reading Association Conference, Perth, July 1986.
Martin, J. R. and J. Rothery (1980) Writing project report No. 1. Working Papers in Linguistics No. 11. Linguistics Department, University of Sydney.
(1981) Writing project report No. 2. Working Papers in Linguistics No. 21. Linguistics Department, University of Sydney.
(to appear) What is good writing? the school’s view. In R. Hasan (ed.) Five to nine: children’s language from home to school.
Martin, J. R., F. Christie and J. Rothery (to appear) Social processes in education: a reply to Sawyer and Watson (and others). In I. Reid (ed.) Set of Occasional Papers. Geelong, Deakin University.
Martin, J. R., P. Wignall, S. Eggins and J. Rothery (to appear) Secret English: discourse technology in a Junior secondary school. In L. Gerot and T. van Leeuwen (eds.) Language and socialization: home and school. Sydney, School of English and Linguistics, Macquarie University.
Murray, D. M. (1982) Learning by teaching: selected articles on writing and teaching. Montclair, Boynton/Cook Publishers.
(1986) The role of interaction in learning to speak and learning to write. In Painter and Martin (1986): 62–97.
Painter, C. and J. R. Martin (eds.) (1986) Writing to mean: teaching genres across the curriculum. Occasional Papers No. 9, Applied Linguistics Association of Australia.
(1986a) Teaching writing in the primary school: a genre-based approach to the development of writing abilities. Working Papers in Linguistics No. 41. Linguistics Department, University of Sydney: 3–62.
(1986b) Let’s teach children to write. Working Papers in Linguistics No. 41. Linguistics Department, University of Sydney: 111–130.
Sawyer, W. and K. Watson (to appear) Questions of genre. In I. Reid (ed.) Set of Occasional Papers. Geelong, Deakin University.
Cited by (19)
Cited by 19 other publications
Roll, Heike
Horverak, May Olaug
Khodabandeh, Farzaneh, Manoochehr Jafarigohar, Hassan Soleimani & Fatemeh Hemmati
고보애
Carder, Maurice
Dressen-Hammouda, Dacia
Mustafa, Zahra
Cumming, Alister
Paltridge, Brian
Black, Paul
Marshall, Stewart
Richardson, Paul
Foley, Joseph
Foley, Joseph
Marks, Genée & Judith Mousley
Walton, Christine
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 14 november 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
