Yesterday evening I met up with
Hamad again for a tutoring session. As mentioned in the previous tutoring
session blog with Hamad, he has the IELTS test coming up, so more writing
practice was in store for our session. Last time we went over some adjective
connectors such as however, furthermore, etc., so we segued onto transition
words to start new paragraphs, some of which are connectors themselves.
It is important to be aware of the
subtle meaning of transition and connector words, which may be unconsciously
understood by native speakers but escape the learner. Some imply agreement or
equality, such as: together with, similarly, by the same token,
correspondingly, and additionally. Some transition words point out causes and
conditions, such as: with this in mind, in the event that, provided that, and
since. There are many different implications that can be presented with
transition words that can advance the progression of an argument within a
paper. I couldn’t find any other way other than to introduce a few of each
meaning to Hamad and provide examples, then have him give me examples. This is
pretty slow going but Hamad is very bright and caught on to every example.
I suggested to Hamad that between
now and his test that he read essays online or find a book from the library and
just read; I actually had a book I bought a few years ago called ‘America’s
Best Essays’, so I lent it to him to have a look at. I hope these tools will
help him on his writing test.
I too have had trouble with connector words with my tutees in that they forget to use them.
ReplyDeleteGreat idea to analyze good essays to see how they use language, connectors, examples, etc. to illustrate their ideas. Try to go over a couple with him
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