Media Texts and Language Interventions updated
A year or two ago, I put up a list of links to articles that might be used as style models or sources of inspiration for the A2 writing coursework part of the AQA A (Language Intervention) and AQA B (Media Text) specifications. This has been updated a few times, thanks to links that colleagues and blog/Twitter people have sent me, but I thought it was probably time to add a few more, so here goes.
If you are a teacher reading this, you might also find this useful for the new AQA English Language A level that starts being taught in September 2015, where Paper 2 has a writing task similar to the media text and intervention.
Again, I'd be delighted to add any others if you want to suggest them, either as comments on this blog post or as tweets via @EngLangBlog.
Opinion pieces
Feature articles
If you are a teacher reading this, you might also find this useful for the new AQA English Language A level that starts being taught in September 2015, where Paper 2 has a writing task similar to the media text and intervention.
Again, I'd be delighted to add any others if you want to suggest them, either as comments on this blog post or as tweets via @EngLangBlog.
Opinion pieces
English can absorb this assault from texting (Canadian article)
Isabelle Kerr on silly new words and why they shouldn't be in the dictionary
John McWhorter on “Is Texting Killing English ?”(short answer: no)
David Marsh on arguments about language and The Pedants' Revolt
Kyle Chayka asks "Is the Innanet RUINING teh English Language??? ¯\(°_o)/¯"
Hannah Jane Parkinson on How We Are Judged On Our Accents
Cumberbatch Needs to be More Careful with Words ('coloured' actors and racist language)
Don't Crucify Cumberbatch (the 'coloured' controversy)
Robert Lane Greene on prejudice against accents
Cumberbatch Needs to be More Careful with Words ('coloured' actors and racist language)
Don't Crucify Cumberbatch (the 'coloured' controversy)
Robert Lane Greene on prejudice against accents
Rebecca Holman on ‘Menglish’ (gender and language)
Girls are way ahead of the linguistic curve (gender and language innovation)
Britt Peterson on Why We Love the Language Police (grammar and non-standard English)
Ben Zimmer on 'Salty', a "Word with a Promising Future".
Manterruption: the "Secret Plague" for women at work
Ben Zimmer on 'Salty', a "Word with a Promising Future".
Manterruption: the "Secret Plague" for women at work
Comments
Post a Comment