Abstract
The notion of sentence may seem clear to many, but in French L1 writing, students at the end of elementary school or at the beginning of secondary school experience some difficulties in punctuation, and their sentences often lack syntactic complexity. These areas of writing production are particularly important for students to gain control over sentence construction. During the first phase of a research project, we developed new teaching devices to address this problem through collaborative work with teachers and teacher consultants, which led to the creation of a sequence for students aged 10 to 14. In this paper, we will first explain why the notions of phrase syntax/clue (literally 'syntactic sentence') and phrase graph/clue (literally 'graphic sentence') were chosen as key grammar concepts to talk about and justify syntactic and punctuation phenomena in French L1 writing. We will then demonstrate how these two notions were introduced to students in the sequence, through a first teaching device, and how they were mobilised to support whole-group metalinguistic discussions within two other teaching devices, which focused on punctuation and syntax.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Nadeau, M., Quevillon Lacasse, C., Giguère, M.-H., Arseneau, R., & Fisher, carole. (2020). Teaching syntax and punctuation in French L1: How the notion of sentence was operationalized in innovative didactic devices. L1 Educational Studies in Language and Literature, 20, Running Issue(Running Issue), 1–28. https://doi.org/10.17239/l1esll-2020.20.03.05
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