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oapen-20.500.12657-496002021-06-19T00:56:31Z Chapter 9 Between joyride and high-stakes examination Elf, Nikolaj Troelsen, Solveig writing studies, writing development, cross-national writing research, school writing, curricular analysis, curriculum, assessment tools, national education bic Book Industry Communication::J Society & social sciences::JN Education This chapter analyses how writing and writing development has been and currently is prescribed and enacted in the curriculum for Danish as a subject (L1) in Years 1–9. Highlighting historical points of impact for writing in curricula from the early–nineteenth century through frequent reforms in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, we focus empirically on the 2014 ruling curricular document Common Standards and auxiliary documents framing writing assessment at the school-leaving exam, as well as empirical classroom studies. Analyses of steering documents indicate that there has been an unprecedented push towards outcome-based and competence-oriented writing curricula. Following Ivanič's Discourses of Writing (DoW) framework, process writing is found to be the most dominant discourse from Grades 1–7. The analysis of the enacted writing curriculum, which focuses on empirical studies from 2009 until now, reveals that the enacted curriculum is misaligned with the prescriptive curriculum and tends to position the student in ambiguous ways—from joyful writer to a writer tested in high-stakes exams. For discussion, we call for a more coherent writing curriculum. Methodologically, we argue that the DoW framework needs to be complemented with a Nordic Bildung tradition, which accentuates personal formation, and a multimodal framework informing the Danish curriculum. 2021-06-17T08:21:28Z 2021-06-17T08:21:28Z 2021 chapter 9780367508142 9780367508166 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/49600 eng application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International 9781003051404_oachapter9.pdf https://www.routledge.com/9780367508142 Taylor & Francis International Perspectives on Writing Curricula and Development Routledge 7b3c7b10-5b1e-40b3-860e-c6dd5197f0bb 725b8c90-0be6-4c36-ace4-16975d3010c4 9780367508142 9780367508166 Routledge 24 open access
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OAPEN
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English
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This chapter analyses how writing and writing development has been and currently is prescribed and enacted in the curriculum for Danish as a subject (L1) in Years 1–9. Highlighting historical points of impact for writing in curricula from the early–nineteenth century through frequent reforms in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, we focus empirically on the 2014 ruling curricular document Common Standards and auxiliary documents framing writing assessment at the school-leaving exam, as well as empirical classroom studies. Analyses of steering documents indicate that there has been an unprecedented push towards outcome-based and competence-oriented writing curricula. Following Ivanič's Discourses of Writing (DoW) framework, process writing is found to be the most dominant discourse from Grades 1–7. The analysis of the enacted writing curriculum, which focuses on empirical studies from 2009 until now, reveals that the enacted curriculum is misaligned with the prescriptive curriculum and tends to position the student in ambiguous ways—from joyful writer to a writer tested in high-stakes exams. For discussion, we call for a more coherent writing curriculum. Methodologically, we argue that the DoW framework needs to be complemented with a Nordic Bildung tradition, which accentuates personal formation, and a multimodal framework informing the Danish curriculum.
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9781003051404_oachapter9.pdf
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9781003051404_oachapter9.pdf
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9781003051404_oachapter9.pdf
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9781003051404_oachapter9.pdf
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9781003051404_oachapter9.pdf
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9781003051404_oachapter9.pdf
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Taylor & Francis
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2021
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https://www.routledge.com/9780367508142
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1771297487518171136
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