How Can I Engage My Audience?


Strategy 

Explicit teaching

Teachers will need to provide exposure to a wide variety of texts in different modes as well as multimodal texts when teaching a particular topic and to guide students in creating their own texts using a form appropriate to the audience.


General strategies

Each time students are accessing a new text they can be asked to identify the purpose and audience of the text and discuss how the writer or composer has made language choices in order to engage their audience. For example, if the purpose is to entertain, the type of text and the language choices will be different to a text which aims to provide information about a scientific topic. Writing for publication on a class blog will be different to writing an email to a friend. While planning for writing and composing students can identify their intended audience and explain to a partner or the class how they will plan to engage the audience.

Students can be asked to collect persuasive texts in the community for homework and identify the target audience. For example, utilities bills sometimes include brochures with paragraphs trying to convince customers to save water or energy or purchase a new product.


Activities to support the strategy

Identifying audience and purpose

While building the field about a topic students practice Identifying audience and purpose for a variety of texts. When it comes to composing their own texts this exposure will ensure they are aware of a variety of possible formats to use and an idea of what language and text features are available to them.

Students can be provided a list of URLs and hard copies of posters, brochures etc.


Who will read or view my text?

Before beginning the process of creating a text ask students to consider in pairs who the audience will be (parents, the principal, other students) and what type of text would be appropriate.


Questions that could guide planning include: