Rabu, 31 Desember 2014

Essay_Septiana Wahyu Setyaningrum

Septiana Wahyu Setyaningrum
2201412053
Academic Writing 201_Essay Assignment

The Miracle of Pictures: An Easy Way to Improve Written Recount

Have you ever written recount text? It is difficult or easy for you? If you think that recount text is difficult, I have an easy way to improve written recount. It will be useful for students or also teachers will get new way on teaching recount. By using pictures, it can improve students’ written recount. Here I will explain three main points, recount, pictures and the relationship between recount and pictures, that is improving written recount by using pictures.. First, let’s see the explanation of recount.
Recount
Sometimes you want to tell other people about what happened in your life. Maybe it is about experience that you faced or holiday that you did at weekend. All about writing past event is called recount.
Based on decd.sa.gov.au, recounts are used to relate experiences or retell events for the purpose of informing, entertaining or reflecting. Recounts can be personal, factual or imaginative.
Personal recount – retelling an activity that the writer has been personally involved in and may be used to build the relationship between the writer and the reader e.g anecdote, diary journal, personal letter.
Factual recount – reporting the particulars of an incident by reconstructing factual information e.g. police reconstruction of an accident, historical recount, biographical and autobiographical recounts.
Imaginative recount – applying factual knowledge to an imaginary role in order to interpret and recount events e.g. A Day in the Life of a Roman Slave, How I Discovered Radium.
Procedural recount – recording the steps in an investigation or experiment and thereby providing the basis for reported results or findings.
Literary recount – to retell a series of events for the purpose of entertaining

Mark Anderson and Kathy Anderson (1997, p.48-50) explained that the recount text type retells past events, usually in the order in which they happened. The purpose of a recount is to give the audience a description of what occurred and when it occurred.  The steps for constructing a written recount are:
1.      A first paragraph that gives background information about who, what, where and when (called an orientation)
2.      A series of paragraph that retell the events in the order in which they happened
3.      A concluding paragraph (not always necessary)
The language features usually found in recount are:
1.      Proper noun to identify those involved in the text
2.      Descriptive words to give details about who, what, when, where and how
3.      The use of the past tense to retell the events
4.      Words that show the order of the events (for example, first, next, then)
Hartono (2005, p.12) gives the example of recount text entitled On Mother’s Day by Mary
            On Sunday it was Mother’s day. I woke up at 7:00. I wanted to make breakfast for mum. I wanted her to have breakfast in bed.
            I got a present for mum and wrapped it up. I put a bow on it.
            Then I went to the kitchen and made two pieces of toast. I put some butter and jam. I also made a cup of tea. Then I put everything on a tray.
            Then I brought the breakfast to mum’s bed. I said, “Happy Mother’s day, Mummy.” And she said, Thank you so much.”
            Then my dad came and said, “You don’t have to cook on Mother’s day”. So we went to Pizza Hut for dinner.

Pictures
Pictures are as a media that can be seen and observed. Pictures may be used in making cohesive and systematic sentences to be the series of event which is constructed in a chronological order. Pictures can attract us to create our ideas in writing. We will get imagination about pictures that we see. The pictures will inspire us in expressing our ideas into paragraph. The pictures are effective toward our writing because we get motivation to increase our potential in writing text after we imagine the pictures.

Pictures can be used to help the teacher in delivering a material which is given to the student. Pictures are used to stimulate the participation of the student in learning process. It is needed to make learning process more attractive. It makes the material easier to be accepted by the students.

According to Wright (1989, p.2), pictures are not just an aspect of method, but through their representation of places, objects, and people they are essential part of the overall experience. It means that, pictures can help the learners to understand the meaning of a word because it represents the meaning of it. Raimes (1983, p. 27-28) stated that pictures will bring everything the outside world into the classroom in a vividly concrete way. So a picture is a valuable resource as it provides:
1. a shared experience in the classroom;
2. a need for common language forms to use in the classroom;
3. a variety of tasks;
4. a focus of interest for students

Hill (1985) explained that the following ideas were kept in mind while selecting the pictures:
1.      Pictures stimulate thinking, ideas and provide a context for learners to write.
2.      Similar types of picture stories were given to familiarize learners with the genre
of picture story writing and to avoid confusion.
3.      Complete picture stories were given to learners as they would provide mental
            links, save time, and help for continuity in writing.
Wright (1989, p. 193) explained that there are 20 types of picture that can be found, they are
1.) Pictures of a single object
2.) Pictures of one person
3.) Pictures of famous people
4.) Pictures of several people
5.) Pictures of people in action
6.) Pictures of places
7.) Pictures from history
8.) Picture with a lot of information
9.) Pictures of the news
10.) Pictures of fantasies
11.) Pictures of maps and symbols
12.) Pairs of pictures
13.) Pictures and texts
14.) Sequence of picture (Picture Series)
15.) Related pictures
16.) Single stimulating pictures
17.) Ambiguous pictures
18.) Bizarre pictures
19.) Explanatory pictures
20.) Student and teacher drawings
Moreover the using of pictures has function. Here are some functions of picture for
the teaching-learning activity. According Wright (1989, p.4-5) some functions of pictures are
a.         Structures and Vocabulary
Pictures are very useful for presenting new grammatical and vocabulary entries. They also help to provide the situations and the contexts that light up the meaning of words or utterances, and help the teachers to avoid giving a long translation that might confuse the learners.
b.        Function and Situation
Pictures can be used for the revision from one lesson to another. Pictures also can be used as the basis of the written work, for example question writing. Pictures also can increase the learners‟ motivation and provide a useful practice material.
c.         Skills
Pictures can be useful to give the learners an opportunity to practice the language in real context or in the situations in which they can use it to communicate their ideas. Based on the statements above, it can be concluded that pictures can be used by teachers and students whatever the emphasis of the syllabus they are following. Pictures have some functions that related to structure and vocabulary, function and situation, and skills.

Improving Written Recount by Using Pictures
Litasari on her research stated that based on research in SMA Negeri 2 Banjarbaru, the appearance of picture series as a technique in teaching writing narrative text has improved the students’ writing ability in writing narrative text of tenth grade students of SMA Negeri 2 Banjarbaru especially the students in X6 class as the experimental class. She concluded that the appearance of picture series as a technique in teaching writing narrative text has improved the students’ writing ability in writing narrative text and using picture series had effects in
improving students’ skill in writing narrative text.
Sa’diyah on her study revealed that the use of the picture series succeeded in promoting the students’ positive attitude toward the learning process. It proves that the presence of the picture series as interesting realia increased the students’ attention and seriousness in doing the writing task. The pictures also enhanced the students’ participation and interaction during the learning activities.
Based on Hestri’s research (2013) there is effectiveness of using picture series to improve students’ writing ability in recount text at the eight-grade students of SMP N 33 Purworejo in the academic year of 2011/2012. Pictures as media is effective to improve students’ writing ability in recount text because the result of t-test was higher than t-table.


Based on the result of the study/research above, overall it can be concluded that by using pictures, it can improve students’ written recount. The pictures attract and interest students, so by using pictures, students stimulate and motivate to improve written recount. And also the pictures interest the student, so the students enjoy writing recount.

References

Anderson M and K.(1997). Text Type in English 1.South Yara: Macmillan Education Australia PTY LTD
Hartono, Rudi. (2005). Genre-Based Writing. English Department of Semarang State University. Unpublished.
Hestri, Suli. (2013). The Effectiveness of Using Picture Series to Improve Students’ Writing Abilty in Recount Text At The Eight-Grade Students of SMP N 33 Purworejo in the Academic Year of 2011/2012. Retrieved from http://ejournal.umpwr.ac.id/index.php/scripta/article/download/516/507

Hill, L. A. (1989). Picture Composition Book. London: Longman.
Litasari, Linda.(2012). An Experimental Study on the Use of Picture Series in Teaching Writing Narrative Text at the Tenth Grade Students of SMA Negeri 2 Banjarbaru. Retrieved from http://jurnal.unimed.ac.id/2012/index.php/jelt/article/view/924

Raimes, Ann. (1983). Techniques in Teaching Writing. New York: Oxford University Press
Sa’diyah, Halimatus. Improving Students’ Ability In Writing Descriptive Texts Through A Picture Series Aided Learning Strategy. The English Teacher Vol. XL: 164-182. Retrieved from http://www.melta.org.my/ET/2011/164_182_Halimatus.pdf

Wright, Andrew. (1989). Pictures for Language Learning. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.

Senin, 03 November 2014

CITATION QUOTATION



                                                            Septiana Wahyu S._2201412053

CITATION/QUOTATION

Avoidance is a common communication strategy that can be broken down into several subcategories (Brown, 2000)

Oshima and Hogue (2007) stated that writing an essay is no harder than writing a paragraph.

An experimental design is the general plan for carrying out a study with an active independent variable (Ary et al., 2010, p.301).

Mooney (2000) explained that Dewey was saying that children need teachers “to decide what is safe and also developmentally and individually appropriate for them” (p.7).

Fiske’s study (as cited in Rukmini, 2009) proposed two schools of communication, process school and semiotic school.


Maxwell (1992) argued that qualitative researchers need to be cautious not to be working within the agenda of the positivists in arguing for the need for research to demonstrate concurrent, predictive, convergent, criterion related, internal and external validity.


The social and educational world is a messy place, full of contradictions, richness, complexity, connectedness, conjunctions and disjunctions (Cohen, Laurence &Keith, 2007).


In a foreign language situation, children will depend almost entirely on the school environment for input (Moon, 2000).


Montesorri believed that children should be able “to do everything they capable of” (Mooney, 2000, p. 29).


Bailey (2006) stated most academic courses in English-medium colleges and universities use essays or other written tasks to assess students’work.

Selasa, 28 Oktober 2014

MID ACADEMIC WRITING

Mohon bapak juga membuka email atas nama xepty.valova@gmail.com. saya sudah mengirimkan attachment. Tulisan saya diblog jadi tidak teratur, posisi huruf derubah, dan juga flowchartny tidak terlihat.
Mohon maaf sebelumnya pak.

MID ACADEMIC WRITING




IMPROVING
WRITTEN RECOUNT  BY USING PICTURES ON ELEMENTARY STUDENT

proposal skripsi
disajikan sebagai salah satu tugas mata kuliah Academic Writing

by
Septiana Wahyu Setyaningrum
2201412053


ENGLISH DEPARTMENT
FACULTY OF LANGUAGES AND ARTS
SEMARANG STATE UNIVERSITY
2014
\


  1. Background of the Research
                          In learning English we understand that there are four language skills, listening, reading speaking, and writing. Of that four language skills, writing may really be considered the most sophisticated one. In listening and reading, the students receive a message formulated by another; their role is receptive even though they may be actively interpreting and analyzing what they are hearing or reading. In speaking, the students are engaged in communicating their own ideas and feelings, but with approximate and explanation. Communication through the written word, on the other hand, possesses a certain degree of finality and demands real proficiency from the writer if it is to be effective. So here, in writing everybody deliver their own ideas by themselves, no helping from other, because one and another have different ideas in making writing.

Writing is one of the language skills that is taught in English class. We may find many students feel difficult in process writing. They don’t feel easy to deliver their ideas. One of text type that is taught on Elementary students is recount text. Recount text is a kind of text that retell past events. In teaching recount, the teacher suggest to improve written recount by using pictures because students will stimulate with the pictures  and they feel fun when look various pictures.


B.     Research Question
1.         Can picture as media to improve the student written recount?
2.         How to apply pictures to improve the student written recount?


C.     Research Objective
1.         to find out the evidence that picture can improve student written recount
2.         to discuss how the pictures improve students written recount

D.    Benefit of the Research

1.      Theoretical benefit
This research may become reference and alternative choice for another researcher.

2.      Practical benefit
a.         For students: Students will be able to improve their written recount effectively by using pictures.
b.        For the teacher: This research wants to introduce the teachers that teaching recount by using pictures may improve students written.
c.         For the writer: The writer herself, this study can increase her skill in writing proficiency.

E.       Review of the Related Literature

A.     Review of the Previous Studies
Many researchers use picture as a topic on their research. Pešková (2008:70) on her thesis concluded that pictures still seem to have their place in ESL(English Second Language) teaching and to be an appropriate supplementary material, also for purposes of teaching about ESC(English Spoken Country). Then Sa’diyah on her journal  suggested that teachers use picture series to enrich ideas, promote students’ attention, help them focus on the learning process, and enhance participation. Another researcher Litasari stated that using picture series had effects in improving students’ skill in writing narrative text. Besides, using picture series in teaching writing has improved the students’ writing ability in writing narrative text, since the students’ achievement increase after they were taught by using picture series, it increased students attention while they are asked to write a narrative text, the students were focus to participate the writing lesson while teaching learning activity was happening.

B.     Theoretical Reviews
1.         Pictures
According to Rimes (1983:28) some suggestion for general strategies for using any pictures might be useful:
a.              Whole-class discussion which then leads to writing, can be generated by many types of pictures
b.                          To provide a student audience for the student writers, give a half the class one
picture, and the other half another. A range of communicative tasks for small groups opens up now, with students conveying real information to others.
c.              With students working in pairs or small group, give each student of pair or each group a different pictures to work with, it can make teacher frees of obtaining class sets of pictures, and also provides students with a real communicative task. When the students have the only copy of a picture, they should be able to inform the rest of the class about it.
d.             Real communicative tasks can be developed by using in the classroom pictures that the students themselves provide. The is a double advantages here: the teacher can relieved of the task of finding a picture and the students have something to write about in the classroom.
e.              Do not limit classroom work to what the students can actually see in the picture. Remember that students can make inferences, predictions, and suppositions about the world beyond the fame of the picture. Ask the students to use their imagination to visualize what happened just before the moment in the picture and what will happen next.

Gerngross and Puchta (1992) explained the types of picture:
a.              Photographs from magazines or newspapers, which include portraits, action
photographs, landscapes, objects, animals, etc.
b.             Personal photographs taken by the teacher or students
c.              Drawings including visual material like artwork, stickers, maps, etc.
d.             Cartoons a s pictures stories
e.              Classroom visual aids which are all kinds of visual stimuli created for use in the
classroom only.
f.              Commercial artwork, i.e. advertisements, book covers, etc.

According to Hill (1985), the following ideas were kept in mind while the pictures:
a.          Pictures stimulate thinking, ideas and provide a context for learners to write.
b.         Similar types of picture stories were given to familiarize learners with the genre
of picture story writing and to avoid confusion.
c.          Complete picture stories were given to learners as they would provide mental
links, save time, and help for continuity in writing.

                        Pešková (2008: 18) stated that the teacher can choose from different possibilities when presentate the picturesa.
a.         Pictures are displayed just by the teacher: The teacher holds a poster or a bigger’picture in his/her hands and displays it from that place in the classroom which is visible to all learners. Alternatively, he/she walks around the classroom.
b.        The teacher distributes copies to individuals/pairs/groups, depending on the type of work.
c.         Most frequently pictures are displayed on magnet boards/black boards/notice boards.
d.        Computers can be used: the teacher prepares a slide show or learners work on their own computers at their desks.
e.         Pictures are hidden on the furniture in the classroom when the activity is arranged as a game: e. g. picture are stuck on different pieces of furniture around the classroom and pupils have to find them.
The presence of the picture series as interesting realia in this study also facilitated the interaction between the students and the teacher. The observation show that more than half the class participated in asking questions and giving ideas. Most of them (approximately more than half the class) were actively involved in the learning process, making comments or asking questions about the instruction as well as about the pictures, whether to the teacher or to their classmates. It can be inferred that there was dynamic interaction between the teacher and the students. This dynamic interaction between the teacher and the students was made by because of the presence of the concrete object to be observed and to be discussed, i.e., the picture series (Halimatus Sa’diyah, The English Teacher Vol. XL: 164-182).

2.         Recount
Recount text is one of the example of story genre which “retell events for the purpose of informing” (Hartono, 2005, p.6)
Anderson M&K (2003:50) explained that the recount text type retells past events, usually in the order in which they happened. The steps for constructing  a written recount are:
a.              A first paragraph that gives background information about who, what, where and when (called an orientation)
b.             A series of paragraph that retell the events in the order in which they happened
c.              A concluding paragraph (not always necessary)
Anderson M&K (2003:50) also stated that the language feature usually found in recount are:
a.              Proper noun to identify those involved in the text
b.              Descriptive words to give details about who, what, when, where and how
c.              The use of the past tense to retell the events
d.             that show the order of the events (for example, first, next, then)

F.      Flowchart


















Oval: 1










Oval: 1

 





















First do the research, the researcher notice what the problem on this research that is using pictures to improve written recount. Then identification problem then see what the objective on this research. Next, the researcher collects the data. It’s match to do test, because there is experiment research. There are experimental group and control group. After that the researcher will analyze the data to know the result then get the conclusion of the research.

G.    Research Design
            This research deals with improving written recount by using pictures. Accordingly, an experimental research is the best way to do this research. According to Ary et al (2010:301), an experimental design is the general plan for carrying out a study with an active independent variable. The design is important because it determines the study’s internal validity, which is the ability to reach valid conclusions about the effect of the experimental treatment on the dependent variable. Designs differ in their efficiency and their demands in terms of time and resources, but the major difference is in how effectively they rule out threats to internal validity. Obviously, one first chooses the design that is appropriate for testing the hypothesis of the study. From the appropriate designs, one must choose the one that will (1) ensure that the subjects assigned to the treatment and control groups do not differ systematically on any variables except those under consideration and (2) ensure that the outcome is a consequence of the manipulation of the independent variable and not of extraneous variables. So I used the quantitative experimental, where there are two groups to be researched. So, I will choose two classes to be researched. One’s called experimental class and the other one is control

H.    Object of the research
The object of the research is Elementary students.

I.       Research instrument
In this study, the data is from test. So the researcher will get score both from experimental group and control group.

  1. Data collection technique
The data collection techniques is based on:
1.      Pre-test:
In the first meeting pre-test will be held to measure students’ writing skill. Experiment group and control group are both got pre-test. The student have to write recount text accidentally.
2.      Treatment
 In this step, researcher introduce students to engage recount text by using pictures. This treatment is held more than once. The experiment group will get this treatment, on the other hand the control group is not. It means the control group is not teach recount by using pictures, but in ordinary way.
3.      Post-test:
4.      Post-test is given in the end of research, it means in the end of the treatment. This post test leads us to know the difference between experimental group and control group and the result of the research.

K.    Data Analysis Technique

The researcher will use quantitative data analysis because this research relate to score on students based on pre-test and post-test. Cohen et al (2007) explained that quantitative data analysis is a powerful research form, emanating in part from the positivist tradition.


L.     Bibliography
Anderson, M. & Anderson, K. 2003. Text Types in English 1. South Yarra, Victoria: MacMillan Education Australia.
Ary, Donald et al. 2010. Introduction to Research in Education. California: Wadsworth, Cengage Learning
Cohen, Louis et al.2007.Research Methods in Education. New York: Routledge
Gerngross G. and Puchta H.1992. Pictures in Action. Prentice Hall: New York
Hartono, Rudi. 2005. Genre-Based Writing. Semarang: Semarang State University
Hill, L.A., 1985.The Picture Composition.London: Longman
Litasari, Linda. “An Experimental Study On The Use Of Picture Series In Teaching Writing Narrative Text At The Tenth Grade Students Of SMA Negeri 2 Banjarbaru”. FKIP Universitas Lambung Mangkurat
Pešková, Karolína. 2008. “Teaching about English Speaking Countries through Pictures”. Thesis. Brno: Masaryk University.
Raimes, Ann. 1983. Techniques in Teaching Writing. New York: Oxford University Press
Sa’diyah, Halimatus. “Improving Students’ Ability In Writing Descriptive Texts Through A Picture Series-Aided Learning Strategy”. The English Teacher Vol. XL: 164-182