Generating ideas from SPAF

Description

An activity to help learners start to apply their knowledge of SPAF to generate ideas for transactional writing tasks.
Sarah Holmes
Quiz by Sarah Holmes, updated more than 1 year ago
Sarah Holmes
Created by Sarah Holmes over 8 years ago
43
1

Resource summary

Question 1

Question
Annotate this text to show how subject-specific language has been included by choosing the most accurate explanation from the drop-down menus at each hotspot.
Answer
  • Term used by tennis commentators on TV
  • It always rains during Wimbledon
  • Term used in sports commentaries
  • confirms this is about tennis
  • helps orientate us on the court
  • shows he knows his tennis terms
  • Assumes the reader understands scoring
  • Assumes prior knowledge of tennis
  • Assumes reader is an umpire
  • Used to build the tension in context
  • Used to confuse the reader
  • Assumes reader knowledge
  • Conveys the significance in tennis
  • Conveys personal significance
  • Conveys significance
  • Language now that of tennis experts.
  • Very technical puts reader off
  • Shows he is panicking, can't form word
  • double meaning adds depth
  • shows how bad it was
  • continues semantic field of tennis
  • Helps create atmosphere
  • Used onomatopoeically
  • Describes typical tennis crowds.
  • Assumes reader understands significance
  • Shows how bad it was
  • He has retreated into his world
  • double meaning adds depth
  • scolds in tennis terms
  • can't let go of tennis

Question 2

Question
Sort the conventions into the 5 purposes of transactional writing by dragging the labels onto the hotspots in the correct columns.
Answer
  • 3rd person generic
  • powerful opening statement
  • includes fact & opinions
  • anecdotal evidence
  • sequential connectives
  • second person pronouns
  • emotive language
  • rhetorical questions
  • causal connectives
  • three-part lists
  • uses 2nd person pronouns
  • imperative & modal verbs
  • uses sequential connectives
  • active sentences
  • prepositional phrases
  • Formal, standard English
  • present tense
  • uses third person pronouns
  • mixes simple & compound sentences
  • includes technical vocabulary
  • written in 3rd person
  • provides specific examples
  • goes from general info to specifics
  • includes imperative verbs
  • may use bullet-points

Question 3

Question
The audience for the transactional writing tasks will always be clearly specified in the question.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 4

Question
Which of the following things do you need to consider when adapting your writing to suit the intended audience of a task?
Answer
  • Their age
  • Their gender
  • Their ethnicity
  • Their prior knowledge of the subject matter
  • Why they are reading/listening to your text
  • How they will be reading/listening to your text
  • How long they will spend reading/listening
  • Any questions they might have about your text
  • How to make your text visually appealing to your readers

Question 5

Question
In what ways does the form of text that you are asked to create inform the choices you might make. Choose all that apply.
Answer
  • The basic structure of the text
  • The formality of the tone and register
  • The use of presentational devices such as headings and sub-headings
  • Some vocabulary choices
  • The subject-specific vocabulary
  • The content

Question 6

Question
You need to be prepared to write a short story for the transactional writing tasks.
Answer
  • True
  • False
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