The purpose of this article is to demonstrate how a technique involving contrastive rhetoric can help writing teachers and their students uncover and improve the overall rhetorical patterns in student writing. Contrastive rhetoric is a theory developed by Kaplan (1966), who argued that rhetorical patterns, like logic, vary from culture to culture. The discourse matrix outlined by Coe (1988), allows contrastive rhetoric a practical application in the ESL classroom. The matrix enables both teacher and student to pinpoint areas in writing where the rhetorical pattern may not follow a typical English pattern. As well, the matrix can be used for revision. The article demonstrates the use of the matrix through examples taken from both English and ESL writers.
CITATION STYLE
Mackie, A., & Bullock, C. (1990). Discourse Matrix: A Practical Tool for ESL Writing Teachers. TESL Canada Journal, 8(1), 67. https://doi.org/10.18806/tesl.v8i1.579
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