<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?><article xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
<front>
<journal-meta>
<journal-id>0123-4641</journal-id>
<journal-title><![CDATA[Colombian Applied Linguistics Journal]]></journal-title>
<abbrev-journal-title><![CDATA[Colomb. Appl. Linguist. J.]]></abbrev-journal-title>
<issn>0123-4641</issn>
<publisher>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Facultad de Ciencias y Educación de la Universidad Distrital, Bogotá Colombia]]></publisher-name>
</publisher>
</journal-meta>
<article-meta>
<article-id>S0123-46412013000100002</article-id>
<title-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[Undertaking the Act of Writing as a Situated SocialPractice: Going beyond the Linguistic and the Textual]]></article-title>
<article-title xml:lang="es"><![CDATA[La escritura situada como una práctica social: más allá de la lingüística y el texto]]></article-title>
</title-group>
<contrib-group>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Chapetín Castro]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Claudia Marcela]]></given-names>
</name>
<xref ref-type="aff" rid="A01"/>
</contrib>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Chala]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Pedro Antonio]]></given-names>
</name>
<xref ref-type="aff" rid="A02"/>
</contrib>
</contrib-group>
<aff id="A01">
<institution><![CDATA[,Universidad Pedagógica Nacional  ]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[ ]]></addr-line>
</aff>
<aff id="A02">
<institution><![CDATA[,Pontificia Universidad Javeriana  ]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[ ]]></addr-line>
</aff>
<pub-date pub-type="pub">
<day>30</day>
<month>06</month>
<year>2013</year>
</pub-date>
<pub-date pub-type="epub">
<day>30</day>
<month>06</month>
<year>2013</year>
</pub-date>
<volume>15</volume>
<numero>1</numero>
<fpage>25</fpage>
<lpage>42</lpage>
<copyright-statement/>
<copyright-year/>
<self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&amp;pid=S0123-46412013000100002&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&amp;pid=S0123-46412013000100002&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_pdf&amp;pid=S0123-46412013000100002&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="en"><p><![CDATA[With an interest to go beyond an emphasis on linguistic and textual features that seem to prevail in writing practices, this qualitative action research study looked at EFL argumentative essay writing within a genre-based approach, where writing was understood as a situated social practice. A group of undergraduate students from a B.Ed. Program in Modern Languages participated in the study. Data were gathered through semi-structured interviews, questionnaires, class recordings, and students' artifacts. Findings revealed that participants undertook the writing of argumentative essays by bonding with their audience, establishing personal involvement with their texts, and giving support to their arguments. The study suggests that it is important to encourage students to focus on their sociocultural and personal context so that EFL writing can be approached in a more purposeful and meaningful way.]]></p></abstract>
<abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="es"><p><![CDATA[Con el interés de ir más allá de un énfasis en las características lingüísticas y textuales que parecen prevalecer en las prácticas de escritura, el presente estudio de investigación-acción cualitativa analizó la escritura de ensayos argumentativos en inglés como lengua extranjera dentro de un enfoque basado en la enseñanza de géneros, donde la escritura se entiende como práctica social situada. Un grupo de estudiantes de un programa de Licenciatura en Lenguas Modernas participó en el estudio. Los datos fueron recogidos a través de entrevistas semiestructuradas, cuestionarios, grabaciones de clase, y artefactos producidos por los estudiantes. Los resultados revelan que los participantes emprendieron la escritura de ensayos argumentativos estableciendo vínculos con su audiencia, involucrándose con sus textos, y sustentando sus argumentos. El estudio sugiere que es importante animar a los estudiantes a enfocarse en su contexto sociocultural y personal de modo que la escritura en inglés como lengua extranjera pueda abordarse de una manera más útil y significativa.]]></p></abstract>
<abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="fr"><p><![CDATA[Avec l'intérêt d'aller au-delà d'un 'accent mis sur les caractéristiques linguistiques et textuelles qui semblent dominer les pratiques d'écriture, cette enquête de recherche-action qualitative a fait l'analyse de l'écriture d'essais argumentatifs en Anglais comme langue étrangère, avec une approche fondé sur l'enseignement de la théorie du genre, où l'écriture est comprise comme une pratique sociale située. Un groupe d'étudiants de Licence en Langues Modernes a fait part de cette enquête. Les données ont été recueillies à travers d'entretiens semi-dirigées, des questionnaires, d'enregistrements dans la salle de classe et des écrits produits par les étudiants. Les résultats montrent que les participants ont entrepris l'écriture d'essais argumentatifs en créant des liens avec leurs lecteurs, s'engageant avec leurs textes et soutenant leurs arguments. L'enquête suggère l'importance d'encourager les étudiants à se centrer dans leur contexte socioculturel et personnel, en sorte que l'écriture en Anglais comme langue étrangère puisse être abordée d'une manière plus utile et significative.]]></p></abstract>
<abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="pt"><p><![CDATA[Com o interesse de ir mais além de uma ênfase nas características linguísticas e textuais que parecem prevalecer nas práticas de escritura, o presente estudo de pesquisa-ação qualitativa analisou a escritura de ensaios argumentativos em inglês como língua estrangeira dentro de um enfoque baseado no ensino de gêneros, onde a escritura se entende como prática social situada. Um grupo de estudantes de um programa de Licenciatura em Línguas Modernas participou no estudo. Os dados foram recolhidos através de entrevistas semiestruturadas, questionários, gravações de classe, e artefatos produzidos pelos estudantes. Os resultados revelam que os participantes empreenderam a escritura de ensaios argumentativos estabelecendo vínculos com a sua audiência, envolvendo-se com seus textos, e sustentando seus argumentos. O estudo sugere que é importante animar os estudantes a enfocar-se no seu contexto sociocultural e pessoal, de maneira que a escritura em inglês como língua estrangeira possa abordar-se de uma maneira mais útil e significativa.]]></p></abstract>
<kwd-group>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Writing as a situated social practice]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[argumentative essay writing]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[genre-based teaching]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[Escritura como práctica social situada]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[escritura de ensayos argumentativos]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[enseñanza basada en géneros]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="fr"><![CDATA[l'écriture comme une pratique sociale situé e]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="fr"><![CDATA[l'é criture d'essais argumentatifs]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="fr"><![CDATA[l'enseignement de la thé orie du genre]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[Escritura como prática social situada]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[escritura de ensaios argumentativos]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[ensino baseado em gêneros]]></kwd>
</kwd-group>
</article-meta>
</front><body><![CDATA[  <font face="verdana" size="2">     <p align="center"><font size="4"><b>Undertaking the Act of Writing as a Situated Social Practice: Going beyond the Linguistic and the Textual</b></font><sup>*</sup></p>     <p align="center"><font size="4"><b>La escritura situada como una pr&aacute;ctica social: m&aacute;s all&aacute; de la ling&uuml;&iacute;stica y el texto</b></font></p>     <p align="center">Claudia Marcela Chapet&oacute;n Castro<sup>**</sup>    <br> Professor at M.A. in Foreign Language Teaching    <br> Universidad Pedag&oacute;gica Nacional    <br> E-mail: <a href="mailot:cchapeton@pedagogica.edu.co">cchapeton@pedagogica.edu.co</a></p>     <p align="center">Pedro Antonio Chala<sup>***</sup>    <br> Professor at B. Ed. in the Teaching of Modern Languages    <br> Pontificia Universidad Javeriana    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br> E-mail: <A href="mailto:pchala@javeriana.edu.co">pchala@javeriana.edu.co</A></p>     <p><sup>*</sup>This article reports findings of the research  project titled: Going beyond the linguistic and the textual in argumentative essay writing: a critical approach carried out at Universidad Pedag&iacute;gica Nacional in Bogot&aacute;,   Colombia between August 2010 and December 2011.    <br> <sup>**</sup>Claudia Marcela Chapet&iacute;n, PhD in Applied Linguistics,  is Associate professor at Universidad Pedag&iacute;gica  Nacional, Bogot&aacute;. She also holds an MA in Applied Linguistics  degree, and a BA in English and Spanish. Her research interests include literacy practices, metaphor, and corpus linguistics.    <br> <sup>***</sup>Pedro Antonio Chala Bejarano, M.A. in Foreign Language Teaching. He is a teacher of English at Pontificia Universidad Javeriana. His professional interests include EFL literacy practices and materials  design.  He has authored school and university EFL teaching materials.</p>     <p>Received: 30-Nov-2012 / Accepted: 15-May-2013</p> <hr>     <p><b>Abstract</b></p>     <p>With an interest to go beyond an emphasis on linguistic and textual features that seem to prevail in writing practices, this qualitative action research study looked at EFL argumentative essay writing within a genre-based approach, where writing was understood as a situated social practice. A group of undergraduate students from a B.Ed. Program in Modern Languages participated in the study. Data were gathered through semi-structured interviews, questionnaires, class recordings, and students' artifacts. Findings revealed that participants undertook the writing of argumentative essays by bonding with their audience, establishing personal involvement with their texts, and giving support to their arguments. The study suggests that it is important to encourage students to focus on their sociocultural and personal context so that EFL writing can be approached in a more purposeful and meaningful way.</p>     <p><b>Key words</b>: Writing as a situated social practice, argumentative essay writing, genre-based teaching.</p> <hr>     <p><b>Resumen</b></p>     <p>Con el inter&eacute;s de ir m&aacute;s all&aacute; de un &eacute;nfasis en las caracter&iacute;sticas ling&uuml;&iacute;sticas y textuales que parecen prevalecer en las pr&aacute;cticas de escritura, el presente estudio de  investigaci&oacute;n-acci&oacute;n cualitativa analiz&oacute; la escritura de ensayos argumentativos en ingl&eacute;s como lengua extranjera dentro de un enfoque basado en la ense&ntilde;anza de g&eacute;neros, donde la escritura se entiende como pr&aacute;ctica social situada. Un grupo de estudiantes de un programa de Licenciatura en Lenguas Modernas particip&oacute; en el estudio. Los datos fueron recogidos a trav&eacute;s de entrevistas semiestructuradas, cuestionarios, grabaciones de clase, y artefactos producidos por los estudiantes. Los resultados revelan que los participantes emprendieron la escritura de ensayos argumentativos estableciendo v&iacute;nculos con su audiencia, involucr&aacute;ndose con sus textos, y sustentando sus argumentos. El estudio sugiere que es importante animar a los estudiantes a enfocarse en su contexto sociocultural y personal de modo que la escritura en ingl&eacute;s como lengua extranjera pueda abordarse de una manera m&aacute;s &uacute;til y significativa.</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><b>Palabras clave</b>: Escritura como pr&aacute;ctica social situada, escritura de ensayos argumentativos, ense&ntilde;anza basada en g&eacute;neros.</p> <hr>     <p><b>R&eacute;sum&eacute; </b></p>     <p>Avec l'int&eacute;r&ecirc;t d'aller au-del&agrave; d'un 'accent mis sur les caract&eacute;ristiques linguistiques et textuelles qui semblent dominer les pratiques d'&eacute;criture, cette enqu&ecirc;te de recherche-action qualitative a fait l'analyse de l'&eacute;criture d'essais argumentatifs en Anglais comme langue &eacute;trang&egrave;re, avec une approche fond&eacute; sur l'enseignement de la th&eacute;orie du genre, o&ugrave; l'&eacute;criture est comprise comme une pratique sociale situ&eacute;e. Un groupe d'&eacute;tudiants de Licence en Langues Modernes a fait part de cette enqu&ecirc;te. Les donn&eacute;es ont &eacute;t&eacute; recueillies &agrave; travers d'entretiens semi-dirig&eacute;es, des questionnaires, d'enregistrements dans la salle de classe et des &eacute;crits produits par les &eacute;tudiants. Les r&eacute;sultats montrent que les participants ont entrepris l'&eacute;criture d'essais argumentatifs en cr&eacute;ant des liens avec leurs lecteurs, s'engageant avec leurs textes et soutenant leurs arguments. L'enqu&ecirc;te sugg&egrave;re l'importance d'encourager les &eacute;tudiants &agrave; se centrer dans leur contexte socioculturel et personnel, en sorte que l'&eacute;criture en Anglais comme langue &eacute;trang&egrave;re puisse &ecirc;tre abord&eacute;e d'une mani&egrave;re plus utile et significative.</p>     <p><b>Motscl&eacute;s</b>: l'&eacute;criture comme une pratique sociale situ&eacute;e, l'&eacute;criture d'essais argumentatifs, l'enseignement de la th&eacute;orie du genre.</p> <hr>     <p><b>Resumo</b></p>     <p>Com o interesse de ir mais al&eacute;m de uma &ecirc;nfase nas caracter&iacute;sticas lingu&iacute;sticas e textuais que parecem prevalecer nas pr&aacute;ticas de escritura, o presente estudo de pesquisa-a&ccedil;&atilde;o qualitativa analisou a escritura de ensaios argumentativos em ingl&ecirc;s como l&iacute;ngua estrangeira dentro de um enfoque baseado no ensino de g&ecirc;neros, onde a escritura se entende como pr&aacute;tica social situada. Um grupo de estudantes de um programa de Licenciatura em L&iacute;nguas Modernas participou no estudo. Os dados foram recolhidos atrav&eacute;s de entrevistas semiestruturadas, question&aacute;rios, grava&ccedil;&otilde;es de classe, e artefatos produzidos pelos estudantes. Os resultados revelam que os participantes empreenderam a escritura de ensaios argumentativos estabelecendo v&iacute;nculos com a sua audi&ecirc;ncia, envolvendo-se com seus textos, e sustentando seus argumentos. O estudo sugere que &eacute; importante animar os estudantes a enfocar-se no seu contexto sociocultural e pessoal, de maneira que a escritura em ingl&ecirc;s como l&iacute;ngua estrangeira possa abordar-se de uma maneira mais &uacute;til e significativa.</p>     <p><b>Palavras chave</b>: Escritura como pr&aacute;tica social situada, escritura de ensaios argumentativos, ensino baseado em g&ecirc;neros.</p> <hr>     <p><b>Introduction</b>     <p>Writing is an  important  component in many foreign  language  classrooms. The  emergence of English  as  an  international  language   has  urged educational institutions to help students develop their communicative  abilities instead  of just focusing  on the  teaching  of grammar. Writing, as an important  language  skill, has  then been  included  in the tasks that students are supposed to develop in their English classes.</p>     <p>However, as Lillis (2001) states,  student  writing has  been  labelled  as  "problematic",  with teachers arguing  that  students cannot  write well, and  texts being used  as an assessment tool. Likewise, as the author points out, the essay, as a ";default genre" has been  widely used  in educational contexts,  but  little has  been  done  to  approach it as a social practice.  Success in essay writing has been understood mainly from the linguistic dimension, and students have been instructed  to focus their attention on <i>how </i>they write, taking for granted <i>why </i>they write, <i>where, when</i>, and <i>in connection to whom. </i>We agree  with Lillis in that student writing is not a problem, but an opportunity for learning about literacy practices and how they can be approached, understood, and enhanced; working on these aspects may foster transformation in language classrooms and society. </p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>From  empiric  observation  and  analysis  of writing practices  in the EFL classroom, it appeared that a descriptive and  narrative approach to writing argumentative texts was privileged with little concern  for social reality; besides, the students' voices seemed restricted in their discourse, as the purpose for writing was reduced  to producing  and submitting  a product  to be graded. </p>     <p>This  study  emerges as  an  opportunity  to incorporate  a new perspective  towards  the  act  of writing that could raise awareness  about its dynamic nature, which is shaped by social and situated features. The main purpose  of this study was to identify and describe how the students approached argumentative essay writing when it was understood as a situated social practice.</p>     <p>This study takes  a social view of learning that acknowledges the importance of social contact  for intrapersonal construction of meaning and scaffolding in learning  (Bruner  &amp; Sherwood,  1975;  Vygotsky,  1978). It also draws on the idea that learning is directly affected  by social and contextual  factors,  as well as through  social interactions  and  social relationships  (Tarone, 2007). In the same  line of thought,  literacy is considered  from a critical perspective  that  goes beyond  the  mere  learning  of reading  and  writing skills and  the mastering  of linguistic forms; it takes in personal,  social, and cultural practices  that shape  the acts of reading and writing, and it provides us with tools for critical reasoning to challenge and transform sociocultural   practices  through   reflection  and careful thought  (Giroux, 2001). The three theoretical considerations underpinning this study are explained as follows:</p>     <p><i>The act of writing: a socio-situated practice</i></p>     <p>Writing is described  as socio-situated practice which connects language  to what socially situated individuals do both at the broader level of culture and in specific situations (Lillis, 2001). This highlights the idea that writing links us to our cultural, social, situated contexts.  According to Baynham  (1995),  writing as practice looks at the way in which writing and the writer are entrenched in institutional practices,  discourses, and  ideologies.  In his words, to understand writing as situated social practice, it is important  to consider various  aspects: the  subjectivity of the  writer, the writing process, the purpose and audience, the text as product,  the power of the written genre of which the text is an exemplar,  and the source  or legitimacy of that power. Baynham's proposal is central to this study, since it brings in different dimensions that challenge the perspective that writing is mainly a technical skill whose success depends on the mastering of linguistic forms and the ability of a writer to shape  ideas to be decoded by the  reader.  To better  understand this perspective towards the act of writing, we now discuss briefly the social and  situated  nature  of this literacy practice.</p>     <p> Writing is social because it takes  place  within a social  realm.  It arises  from  the  writer's need  to communicate, learn, or express (Ram&iacute;rez, 2007). As writers start jotting down their thoughts, they engage  in dialogic communication with the world and with the powers that compel  them  to write. Besides,  writing involves  ideologies  and  powers  that  are  inherently attached to the writers and  that are put together  in a dialogical relationship  with their voice, influencing their ideas, beliefs, and feelings.  </p>     <p>Writing as  situated  practice  takes  place  at  a specific moment in time and history and at a specific place in society; it makes  up part of the world and acquires meaning  within the context where it occurs.  Two main  aspects make  texts  situated.  First,  the writers' own experiences,  beliefs, and feelings, which are built and shaped through contact with others; and second, those  inherent  to individuals such  as  age, gender,  or race. These life experiences  and personal features that students as writers bring with them are called,  by Lillis (2001), <i>voice-as-experience. </i>These voices situate writing not only as the set of utterances that are produced in interaction, but also as cultural world views which may not be explicit in a utterance or discourse  (Ram&iacute;rez, 2007).  </p>     <p>It is our belief that adopting  this socio-situated perspective on the act of writing can allow students as writers to approach their situated, social, and cultural contexts  and  go  beyond  the  formal and  linguistic aspects implicit in this literacy practice  to assume it in a more purposeful, dialogical, and meaningful way.</p>     <p><i>Argumentative essay writing</i></p>     <p>Predominantly  argumentative essays  deal with controversial  topics;  in  them,  an  author  defends  a point of view that he/she considers valid (D&iacute;az, 2002). Their main purposes include, among  others,  getting an adhesion, modifying a judgment, convincing,  or persuading the reader to change a point of view about a subject.  Argumentation, however, involves  social action.  That is, for persuasion to occur  there needs  to  be  a dialogic  interaction  between  interlocutors (Ram&iacute;rez, 2007)  who  have  certain  reasons   and purposes to communicate and present them in order to reach an agreement.  </p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>Although establishing  face-to-face  interaction in a written text may  not  be  possible  in the  EFL classroom, it is  basic  for the  writer to think of the audience  in order to select the ideas to be presented. Goatly  (2000)  describes  how texts can  convey and create interpersonal relationships by drawing on three dimensions: Power, contact, and emotion. Goatly also refers to various language  elements  that authors  use in order to build up relationships  with their audience:  Addressing the reader directly, or expressing solidarity or  separation, showing  concern   for the  reader, reducing  assertively, imitating  everyday speech, or showing formality. Taking into account these aspects shows an organization of discourse in function of the readership, and their relevance at the textual level is expanded to a social level that is also implied in writing as a situated social practice.</p>     <p class="s15">Argumentative  essay  writing is understood in this study as a dynamic process  of creation.<sup><a name="nu1"></a><a href="#num1">1</a></sup> First is the text, considered as a unit, consisting  of several textual and linguistic elements;  second is writing as a process of creation,  thought,  and use of skills; and finally is the situated social context that the writer and his/her audience belong  to. We refer briefly to these three dimensions below.</p>     <p>With regard to argumentative essay organization, three  main  parts  are  at the  core: the  <i>introductory paragraph</i>,  which presents  the  topic  and  prepares  the  audience   favorably  so  that  they  accept   the thesis; <i>the  body, </i>which supports and  develops  the thesis statement and has a topic sentence (the main idea  of the  paragraph), supporting  sentences, and sometimes a concluding sentence; and <i>the concluding paragraph, </i>which  reminds  the  reader  of the  most important aspects and implies a reinforcement of the arguments that were used. Each of these three parts influences what can be said and done in the others,  thus implying a dynamic relationship. The process  of writing involves a reflective and creative author  who makes  decisions  and becomes engaged in dynamic action with the purpose of influencing and establishing  a dialogical connection with the readers.  The writer, who belongs  to a  sociocultural  reality, uses  his/her personal background, knowledge, and experiences to relate to an audience and expresses his/her viewpoints with regards to issues that concern them both. To this end, the author  also comes  into contact  with power relationships, Discourses (Gee, 2008), and social and cultural practices which make up part of his/her reality and shape  him/her as a person  and as a writer. </p>     <p><i>Genre as situated social action</i></p>     <p>This study draws upon the perspective of <i>genre as social action </i>(Hyland, 2004) and evolves to become <i>genre as situated social action (</i>Bastian, 2010; Miller,  1984).  Thus, it goes beyond the focus on textual and linguistic aspects embedded in writing to consider the context in which texts are produced, along with the purpose  of the writer, and  ultimately to view writing as an attempt to interact and communicate with the audience. </p>     <p>  Hyland (2004) states  that while genres  involve generalities  and  conventions,  their understanding  is  more  dynamic,  thus  favoring  change  and negotiation. Although linguistic and textual aspects are recognized as a part of genres,  the social dimension  of communication and the relationship between  the genres and the social context in which they occur are more relevant. This view allows for flexibility in terms of content  and form. Therefore, the approach is not limited to  the  repetition  or copying  of templates; instead,  it allows  students to  analyze and  reflect upon the organizational and linguistic features of the argumentative genre  so that they can challenge  the power of the text (Grundy, 1987) and take risks as to how they use rhetorical structures or <i>frames </i>(Hyland,  2004)  and <i>formulaic  sequences </i>(Morrison, 2010). This perspective  provides opportunities to consider  students' own voices and experiences, their purposes for writing, the writing processes that they follow, and the audience of their texts. This, consequently, brings into play the view of genre as <i>situated  social action.</i> </p>     <p>In this respect, Bastian (2010) asserts that genres are  actions  occurring  within specific,  social,  and recurrent rhetorical situations. The author states that, as social actions, genres contain ideological elements  that  " represent   and  reinforce  what  participants  within certain rhetorical situations value, believe, and assume"  (p.  31). On  the  other  hand,  Miller (1984) claims that the genre finds meaning  from the social context in which that rhetorical situation arises. These visions suggest  that genres  are situated  and acquire authentic   value in the  specific  context  in which they appear,  and  that  in order  to have a complete  perspective  of their meaning, it  is  necessary  to go beyond their linguistic and textual features.  </p>     <p>The  perspective  of <i>genre  as  situated  social action </i>accounts for key aspects in writing. These aspects involve the writer's subjectivity to choose a topic and select the ideas that he/she wants to include in a text; the purpose  and  audience  which account for a dialogical relationship  between  the writer and his/her readership; the cultural and social context in which the text appears, which imbue it with situated elements  that  it needs  to become meaningful;  and the beliefs, values, interests, Discourses (Gee, 2008), and knowledge that surround, influence, and shape  the ideas that are included in the text. </p>     <p>Two other  factors  that  permeate the  concept of genre  as  situated  social action  in this study  are collaboration  and  scaffolding (Bruner &amp; Sherwood, 1975) provided by skilled writers to struggling peers (Lin et al., 2007).  Appropriate scaffolding that takes place throughout the whole writing process of an essay can  benefit  not  only how language  and  rhetorical structure  are  used  in the  text, but  also  how ideas, attitudes, and previous knowledge can be articulated with the situated context in which writing occurs, thus generating  active engagement (Cotterall &amp; Cohen,  2003).</p>     <p><b>Methodology</b></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>This is a qualitative action  research  study that aims  to generate holistic insights  by looking  into behavior  in its natural  environment  (Johnson &amp; Christensen, 2004). Action research is oriented towards educational practice,  and  its end  is fundamentally to  provide  information  that  will contribute  to  the improvement of teachers'  practice  (Sandin,  2003). Improvement, as stated by Sagor (2000), results from the adjustments teacher-researchers can make to their action,  based  on the  findings of their studies.  This type of research  allows for reflection on pedagogical practices,  aiming at the generation  of action towards constructive change.</p>     <p><i>Context and participants</i></p>     <p>This study was conducted at a private university in Bogot&aacute;. The participants  belonged  to the B. Ed. in the teaching of Modern Languages and were enrolled in the High Intermediate level of English, which is a course  taken  in  sixth semester. A  group  of fifteen students (two male and thirteen female) aged 17 to 23 participated in the study. All participants signed a letter of consent indicating their acceptance to participate in this action research project.</p>     <p><i>Instruments</i></p>     <p>Four  instruments  were designed  and  used  to collect data in this study. First, two questionnaires were used: one, at the initial stage of the process, to build up a participant's profile and gather data about students' attitudes towards writing; and another,  applied at the end of the process, to inquire about the experience of writing argumentative essays after the intervention had taken place. Audio recordings  of class sessions  were used during sixteen weeks. These were highly useful, as  they provided  rich data  on  a permanent-recall basis,  which included  the actual  words used  in the interactions that took place in the development of the class activities. Artifacts (i.e. the written texts created  by the participant students and the written evaluation of each  cycle), collected at three different moments of the  intervention,  became important  pieces  of evidence to show the way students undertook  the act of writing from a situated  social perspective.  Finally, three  semi-structured interviews were conducted; one  at  the  end  of each  cycle. Interviews became a  primary data  source,  as  they gathered students' descriptions  of feelings, reactions,  and  perceptions of how  they approached writing in the  study.  They also  complemented and  enhanced the  data  that was gathered through  the questionnaires, the audio recordings, and the students' artifacts.</p>     <p><i>Pedagogical Design</i></p>     <p>The  instructional   design   emerged  after careful <i>observation and  reflection </i>upon  the way in which  writing was being  approached: mainly as an instrumental  practice  for students to get  a grade. A  second  stage  of the  research   cycle  involved <i>articulating  theory </i>(Sagor,  2005)  to  support  the construction of the pedagogical intervention, which in turn, led to a third stage: <i>implementing action and collecting data. </i>This was linked to the fourth stage of the  cyclical process: <i>reflecting  on  the  data  and planning  informed  action.</i></p>     <p> The instructional  design  followed the order  of topics for writing, as presented in the course program.  The  design  was composed of three  cycles,  each one  corresponding to a term  in the  semester and dealing with a different type of argumentative essay: Opinion,  For  and  Against,  and  Problem-Solutions. During the implementation of the instructional design, the  group  of participants  in the  study  engaged in the  development  of a series  of activities that  were designed  considering  writing as  a situated  social practice  (Baynham,  1995;  Gee, 2008;  Lillis, 2001), and were pedagogically supported by the genre-based approach to teaching writing (Hyland, 2004; Bastian, 2010;  Miller, 1984).  Each writing cycle consisted  of six stages: Exploring the genre, building knowledge of the field, text construction and drafting, revising and submitting  a final draft, assessment and evaluation, and finally, editing and publishing.<sup><a name="nu2"></a><a href="#num2">2</a></sup></p>     <p><b>Findings</b>     <p>The  processes of data  analysis followed the grounded approach (Corbin &amp; Strauss,  1990), as the aim was to gather insights from the data that had been systematically  collected.  This implied an  inductive work, which started out with the raw data, and after a process  of systematic  analysis, meanings emerged.</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p> The emergent categories and sub-categories are shown in <a href="#f1">Figure 1. </a>The data showed that undertaking  the act of writing was an opportunity for participants  to get  involved in relevant social issues  and  at the same  time build relationships  with their audience. In so  doing,  they also  established links between  their texts  and  their  situated  context;  these  links were mediated by and expressed through their arguments. It was found that the bonds  with the audience  were built through  a relationship  of contact, keeping  in mind  the  purpose  participants  wanted  to  attain. Personal involvement with the text was established by situating the text in a personal context and expressing ideas  freely. When approaching the  act  of writing as a situated  social  practice,  the  data  showed  that participants  also  backed  up  their ideas  with solid arguments from  different  sources, as  well as  their own knowledge of the world. Each category and sub- category is now described  in detail. </p>     <p align="center"><a name="f1"><img src="img/revistas/calj/v15n1/v15n1a2f1.jpg"></a></p>     <p><i>Bonding with an audience that goes beyond the classroom bounds</i></p>     <p>The  data  showed  that  the  participants  of the study  wrote their texts considering  their potential readers and  showing willingness to establish  bonds  with them.  The audience  that read the essays in this study involved not only the teacher but also peers and students'  contacts on Facebook; this was important  for the  participants  to  go  beyond  the  concept of <i>audience </i>that they had: The students had expressed  in the  interviews and  the  initial questionnaire that the audience  was not an aspect  to consider  in their previous writing experiences,  since their essays were usually read by the teacher  only.  </p>     <p>As to the  bonds  that  were established in the essay  writing experience  in the  study,  it was clear to the  students that  they were supposed to have a purpose, mainly convincing, persuading, or attracting  the reader. However, in their case  as students of the B. Ed.,  the  reader  was by default  the  teacher  who read  and  marked their papers  and  then  gave them back with feedback and a grade; this showed a linear relationship which was mainly composed of them as  authors  and the teacher  as the only reader. The data showed that the participants  were willing to establish connections with their audience in two main ways: By building a relationship of contact  and by considering  the purpose  of the essay.</p>     <p><i>Building a relationship of contact with the reader</i></p>     <p>The  analysis  of the  data  showed  that  the participants used a number of elements in their essays to establish contact  with their readership. <i>Contact </i>is understood here as the horizontal social relationship that  the  author  wants  to establish  with the  reader (Goatly, 2000). The use of these elements  evidenced the participants' concern  not just for writing a text for the  class,  but  also  for establishing  clear  and  close communication with their audience  within a situated context.</p>     <p> In the first place, although there were participants  who preferred to use impersonal forms to express their ideas and support them, there was also an interesting tendency  to use  the  pronoun  "we" to address  the readersand establish a closer relationship of solidarity, affinity, and partnership:</p>     <p align="center"><a name="g1"><img src="img/revistas/calj/v15n1/v15n1a2g1.jpg"></a></p>    <p>In Goatly's terms  (2000),  this was mainly an inclusive  we, to include the reader in the discussion  of the topic.  Through  the use  of this pronoun, the students were able to explore a closer way to get in contact  with the readership:</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p align="center"><a name="g2"><img src="img/revistas/calj/v15n1/v15n1a2g2.jpg"></a></p>      <p>Writing was, as shown  by the  data,  a way for students to involve their readers  and  get  involved in  social  issues.  At the  same  time  that  students wrote their texts, they participated  in the ideas  and Discourses (Gee, 2008) of their reality. This is directly linked to the  idea  of <i>writing  as  a situated  social practice </i>(Baynham,  1995).  Writing was more  than just putting words together;  it became situated social action. It involved a situated writer willing to bond with a situated audience; by doing this, they participated in the sociocultural practices that shaped them as people  of the world and members of society.</p>     <p> Another  way for the  participants  to establish contact  with their readership  was through  a careful organization of their ideas and the appropriate use of grammar and vocabulary. These aspects were revealed to have an important value, not only to shape the texts, but also to make the ideas clearer for the audience:</p>     <p><b>S1</b>: I  can  support  my own ideas  with strong arguments, but I have to take into account grammar and  vocabulary  to  make  it easier  and  clearer  to understand." &#91;Final questionnaire&#93;</p>     <p align="center"><a name="g3"><img src="img/revistas/calj/v15n1/v15n1a2g3.jpg"></a></p>     <p>The  students point  to  the  importance of organization to communicate with the audience. In this respect, Goatly (2000) suggests that the order in which we present  information  is crucial in organizing  our material effectively. Just  as the students understood the relevance of the rhetorical structure  of the essays in order to meet the requirements of the genre, they also  mentioned that  it was important  to write in a way that their ideas could be understood. There was concern  for establishing  a dialogic connection with the readership, and the way that ideas were presented and organized was important  for communication to occur.  In the students'  view, formal aspects in their texts were important,  but beyond this, it was implied that they wished to establish a relationship with their readers. Students expressed that they were careful to present  their ideas and  feelings about the topics of their essays,  but at the same  time it was important  for them to make their texts clear, in order to connect with the audience  and be able to communicate in a meaningful way.  </p>     <p>As stated  above,  the writing experience  in the study allowed students to build relationships not only  with the  teacher  and  their peers,  but  also  with an external audience on Facebook or on a Blog. This was an opportunity  for students to receive further ideas and comments about the essays from their contacts:</p>     <p><b>S8</b>: "&#91;By uploading  essays  on  Facebook&#93; Different people can give us their opinion about what they think about our essays and can give us feedback." &#91;Final questionnaire&#93;</p>     <p>In the majority of the cases  in which students published  their  essays,  contacts cooperated to provide  their points  of view about  the  texts. Given that the essays were written in English, the audience  was  mainly  people  who  could  understand this language; also, depending on the topic, the number of comments varied. <a href="#f2">Figure 2 </a>is an example of a thread of comments posted on Facebook in response to the publication of a pros and cons essay:  </p>     <p align="center"><a name="f2"><img src="img/revistas/calj/v15n1/v15n1a2f2.jpg"></a></p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>It is important to highlight the fact that sharing the essays generated dialogic communication (Ram&iacute;rez,  2007) between the authors  and their readership;  the authors  did not just <i>transmit </i>ideas  to their readers but <i>shared </i>them instead,  and this fostered dialogue.</p>      <p>This contributed to the building of a relationship  of social <i>contact </i>(Goatly, 2000), which focused  on the content  of the  texts rather  than  on  the  form, thus generating  interaction.  Besides,  as evidenced  in the comments that were generated, there seems to be an indication of a collective construction of knowledge  in which different people participated  with their own understanding of the issue that was being discussed. The ideas and further comments that were provided contributed to improving the participants' perception  of the  writing experience  and  acknowledging  the importance of writing for an audience that was beyond  the teacher  and even their peers:</p>     <p align="center"><a name="g4"><img src="img/revistas/calj/v15n1/v15n1a2g4.jpg"></a></p>     <p>As can be seen here, publishing also allowed the students to focus their attention on the content of their texts and pay closer attention  to how they expressed  their ideas to reach the audience. Besides this, it also helped them to realize that writing does  not have to be linked to the context  of the classroom only, and that the audience can be different from the teacher.  Although publishing  the  essays  generated different feelings in the students, including anxiety about  the readers' reactions,  it was found to be a valuable and enriching experience that allowed them to share their ideas and to look at other people's points of view; that is, generating  dialogic interaction  with an audience  that goes beyond the classroom bounds.</p>     <p><i>Considering a purpose to approach the audience</i></p>     <p>The data showed that identifying the purpose to write was a way to establish a dialogic connection with  the reader. Students saw that through the essays they could persuade their audience  to change their points of view  with  regards  to the  topics  they discussed. As the essays were not read only by the teacher,  the participants became more aware of the way that they were going to express their ideas and communicate with distant readers. From this perspective, then, the authors  were able  to articulate  their discourse  and the relationships  that they wanted to build with their audience (Ram&iacute;rez, 2007). In the following extract from an interview, a student  shows how she understands the approximation  she needs to make when trying to approach her audience  and persuade them:  </p>     <p>It was found  that  the connection that  authors  established with their readers  was not  linear; the students did  not  consider  only their own points  of view to  present  and  convey  a message, but  also considered the audience's reactions  and foresaw the way to reach  it. The texts presented the purpose  in the thesis statement, at the end of the introduction, following genre  conventions, showing the students'  presence, and  establishing  connections with the  reader. The following essay introduction shows a way to express the purpose and at the same way establish communication with the audience:</p>    <p align="center"><a name="g5"><img src="img/revistas/calj/v15n1/v15n1a2g5.jpg"></a></p>     <p align="center"><a name="g6"><img src="img/revistas/calj/v15n1/v15n1a2g6.jpg"></a></p>     <p>In this excerpt, the writer included  information of her  context  to introduce  the  topic  as  well as  a concession idea,  thus  establishing  two types  of connection: First, she drew on knowledge  of reality that  her  readers  may  share,  and  second, through the concession idea, she showed  her consideration of points  of view that were different or opposing  to hers; in other words, she anticipated  the audience's reactions. Besides this, she reduced her assertiveness (Goatly, 2000) when she presented her purpose, by using "From my point of view" and "I would like to." By carefully selecting  forms,  participants  showed understanding of an interpersonal dimension of writing rather than only a linear connection between a writer and the readers. In this respect, a student wrote in the final questionnaire:</p>    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<blockquote>     <p><b>S8</b>: "It is really important to think about the purpose of the text because it helps us to establish the way we will write and obviously we need to have good arguments that support our ideas and convince our audience." &#91;Final questionnaire&#93;</p></blockquote>     <p>Through  explicit analysis of the genre,  socialization, and  personal  reflection, participants  became aware that they needed  to fulfill a purpose  that was indeed the purpose of the genre. It was shown by the data that one way that they found to achieve their purpose  was through an appropriate organization and presentation of their discourse. This would allow them to reach their audience  and persuade or convince them.</p>     <p><i>Establishing Personal Involvement with the Text</i></p>     <p>The  data  pointed  out  that  the  participants  of the  study  assigned  an  important  role to getting  involved with the texts when they wrote their essays. <i>Establishing personal involvement </i>here refers to the different  ways in  which the  students created  a link with their texts and  imprinted  their personal  touch to  make  the  essays <i>theirs. </i>Baynham  (1995)  states  that  "Not all writers are  equal  within the  discourse community"  (p. 241);  this is why although  explicit teaching  of essay writing was provided to the whole class, it was possible for students to approach the act of writing and get involved in it from a situated  and personal way. This personal involvement in the act of writing was expressed  in two main ways: by <i>situating  the texts in a personal context </i>and by <i>building  free expression in the essays.</i></p>     <p><i>Situating the texts in a personal context</i></p>     <p>As shown in the data,  the participants  focused  their writing experiences  on their reality as students, as members of the wider society, and  as people  of the world. They showed  involvement with the issue that they wanted to discuss,  either because it was a personal experience or because in one way or another  it affected  them  as social beings.  Text situatedness allowed the  participants  to express  their ideas  in a more confident way and at the same time imbue their texts with a sense  of social relevance:  </p>    <p align="center"><a name="g7"><img src="img/revistas/calj/v15n1/v15n1a2g7.jpg"></a></p>     <blockquote>    <p>&#91;<b>S8</b>. Excerpt of student's artifact&#93;</p></blockquote>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>Situating  the texts in their sociocultural  context,  as seen  above,  was useful for the participants  to draw upon their knowledge of the world and of the reality that they were living, in order to support their ideas and  connect with their readers.  In other cases,  personal experiences  were used as the backbone to discuss  a social problem; this allowed the writers to express their arguments from their own perspective:</p>     <p align="center"><a name="g8"><img src="img/revistas/calj/v15n1/v15n1a2g8.jpg"></a></p>    <blockquote>     <p><b>S6</b>: I like write this kind of essay &#91;Problem- solutions essay&#93; because the topic  is easy and is a part of my life, so I live that problem and it is easy for me to write and to give my personal opinion." &#91;Final questionnaire&#93;</p></blockquote>     <p>The students were able to build engagement with the text using an array of experiences (Lillis, 2001), which  was all that they brought  with them and contributed to shaping  their texts. In the following excerpt  of a class in which the students were presenting  their final essays, a student  shows how she feels connected to the topic of her essay through a personal experience, which allowed her to construct and present  her own arguments:</p>     <p align="center"><a name="g9"><img src="img/revistas/calj/v15n1/v15n1a2g9.jpg"></a></p>     <p>It is  important  to  note  that  by approaching writing as a situated social practice, participants were able  to  reflect upon  their personal  reality, discuss  issues  that  belonged  to their sociocultural  context, and participate in the social practices that surrounded and shaped them as members of a community.  Even in the first essay, in which the topic was chosen for them, the students were able to find a connection and write their ideas. This is shown by the following quote:</p>    <blockquote>     <p><b>S7</b>: ";My  experience with  this essay &#91;Opinion essay&#93; was really good because I liked the topic we wrote about. Although the teacher gave us the same topic I was really interested on it because I could explain my thoughts related to this subject, and because this topic is related with my major and the reality of education."   &#91;Final questionnaire&#93;</p></blockquote>     <p>Although being assigned  a topic generated different reactions, students discussed the issue and took part in a social reality that pertained to them as students of a B. Ed. and future teachers. In this way, they were also  considered as subjects that belonged to a society and participated  in the social practices  of an educational institution with projection to their field of work.</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><i>Building free expression in the essays</i></p>     <p>Throughout data  analysis,  free  expression  of ideas,  points  of view, and  feelings  emerged as  an important  way in which the participants  approached the  act  of writing. They were able  to analyze and criticize  social  phenomena such  as  educational practices,   violence,  or  the  use  of  technology, and  suggest  solutions  to  issues  that  they  found problematic. Expressing their points of view was a way for them to gain control of their essays and personalize the act of writing, as illustrated in the following quote:</p>    <blockquote>     <p><b>S3</b>: ";My own ideas and strong arguments I think that are important because that makes my essay mine, and with that I'm able to achieve my purpose."       &#91;Final questionnaire&#93;</p></blockquote>     <p>The students looked for information  to support  and illustrate their ideas with quotations and paraphrases; however,  they  acknowledged the  importance of presenting  their own voice in the  essays,  and  they valued  the  chance to express  their points  of view  freely, without restrictions  that  they had  previously  encountered, as revealed in the collected  data.  The following  excerpt  from an  interview  illustrates  this point:     <p align="center"><a name="g10"><img src="img/revistas/calj/v15n1/v15n1a2g10.jpg"></a></p>     <p>Since writing as a situated social practice involves understanding "the subjectivity of the writer and his or her implication in social practices" (Baynham, 1995, p. 208), it was important  to allow students to express their opinions freely. <i>Carte blanche </i>given in the pros  and  cons  essay and  in the problem-solutions essay  resulted in a display of students' ideas about different topics. As shown in the following pros and cons essay conclusion, participants were also careful in reducing  assertiveness (Goatly, 2000),  thus  demonstrating awareness of the social practices and Discourses (Gee,  2008) that surround  writing:  </p>     <p align="center"><a name="center"><img src="img/revistas/calj/v15n1/v15n1a2g11.jpg"></a></p>     <p>The opportunity to express their ideas was determining  for participants  to view writing as purposive  action, rather than as an obligation in the course. It was found in the data  that students'  involvement when writing their essays depended greatly on their interest in and knowledge  of the  topic;  in turn,  these  two factors depended on how identified the participants  felt with the issue. In this respect,  the data showed that even if  the  students did not  know much  about  a topic, they investigated  and learned  about  it because they found it interesting and relevant to their lives or their sociocultural  context.</p>     <p><i>Stepping on Steady Ground to Build Solid Argument</i>s</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>Another  way in which the  participants  of the study  approached essay  writing was by supporting  their ideas using different resources. This was revealed to be useful for students to build arguments with solid bases and at the same time improve their knowledge about the topics. Although the use of references  was more emphasized in the second and third cycles due to reflection on the issues of <i>quotations </i>and <i>fallacies, </i>the data showed that the participants  also supported their ideas with knowledge of the world and their reality throughout the whole experience:</p>    <p align="center"><a name="g12"><img src="img/revistas/calj/v15n1/v15n1a2g12.jpg"></a></p>      <p>&#91;<b>S8. </b>Excerpt of student's artifact&#93;</p>     <p>The  data  revealed  that  the  students drew upon  previous  knowledge  and  knowledge  of the  world to support  their points  of view and  express  general ideas. They also resorted  to specific knowledge that belonged to their personal background (Lillis, 2001) to illustrate their arguments. Likewise, voices from other sources like class or online materials that participants  found authoritative were integrated  and made part of their essays.  This <i>textual interaction </i>(Goatly, 2000) was shown by the data to be a way for participants  to learn about  the topics and also to participate  in the social  practices  (Baynham,  1995)  and  Discourses  (Gee, 2008) that surrounded them. On the other hand, participants also perceived that using references in the essays was as an important  element  to give support  and strength to their arguments and make them clear:</p>    <blockquote>     <p><b>S12</b>: ";As in any essay, it is imperative researching in order to support well and clarify the arguments."</p>     <p align="right">&#91;Final questionnaire&#93;</p></blockquote>     <p>It was shown  that  inclusion of supporting  evidence was more than just a class requirement. Other voices allowed the participants to feel more secure about their arguments, as they supported their ideas and helped them to convince or persuade readers:</p>    <p align="center"><a name="g13"><img src="img/revistas/calj/v15n1/v15n1a2g13.jpg"></a></p>     <p>Including  ideas  from  other  sources   in the form of paraphrases and  quotations was important  for the participants  to generate a more  meaningful interaction  with the  audience  and  approach it with more  solid  arguments; they expressed  ideas  based  not only on their perceptions of the world but also on steady ground that had already been explored by other authors.  </p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>All in all, the categories  that emerged from the data analysis related in terms of the situatedness and  confidence that were built through the approximation  of writing as a situated social practice within a genre- based pedagogy. Participants found in this experience the  opportunity  to express  their own ideas,  and  by doing this, were able to resort to their knowledge of their personal and situated context (Baynham, 1995; Lillis, 2001); besides this, they also had the opportunity to  establish  contact  (Goatly, 2000)  and  dialogic communication (Ram&iacute;rez, 2007) with different types of audience, which allowed them to approach writing from  a  more  socially  situated  perspective,  going beyond the linguistic and textual aspects.  </p>     <p>At the same  time, being immersed in a genre- based approach to writing, participants were also able to undertake this literacy practice in a more self-reliant way. They enjoyed the support  of their teacher  and peers through <i>scaffolding </i>(Bruner &amp; Sherwood, 1975; Vygotsky, 1978), and they made an explicit discovery of key genre features (Hyland, 2004; Morrison, 2010); this facilitated the act of writing and helped them build confidence  to express their arguments in the essays.</p>     <p><b>Conclusions and implications</b> </p>     <p>The  data  showed  that  there  were three  main ways in which the participants of the study undertook  writing when it was understood as a situated  social practice.  Firstly, the  students bonded   with the readership (peers, teacher and contacts on Facebook or a Blog) in two main ways. To begin with, students established  a  relationship  of contact  and  dialogic communication with the  audience, involving them in  the  essays  and  making  their texts  clear,  to  be understood by those  who read  them;  in this way, meaningful  communication was established. The publication  of the essays  on social networks  was a positive experience because it fostered further dialogic communication with an external audience focusing on the content of the texts rather than on formal aspects. On the other hand, the participants also created bonds with  the  audience  because  they kept  in  mind  the purpose  of their essays; the students became aware that they could persuade or convince their readers by carefully articulating their discourse and approaching the audience  through  dialogic communication.  </p>     <p>Secondly, the participants  established personal  involvement  with the  texts  by imprinting  their subjectivity in them.  The personal  involvement with the texts was expressed  by situating  the essays  in a personal context and by building free expression in the essays. The data showed that the students were able to focus their writing experiences on their situated reality,  which allowed them to draw upon their knowledge of the world and present  their ideas from their personal points of view. They also analyzed issues that belonged  to their context, and in this way, they participated  in the social practices that surrounded them as members of society. Participants' free expression of ideas was a relevant aspect, as they could present  their points of view without the restrictions that they had encountered in previous writing experiences, and because they were able to analyze different issues showing their personal voice. By expressing their feelings, points of view and ideas about social issues, they also gained control of their essays, as they could show their own voices and express what they wanted to share.  </p>     <p>The third way in which the students undertook  the act of writing was by stepping  on steady ground to build  solid arguments using  different  resources. The data  showed  that the participants  were able to draw upon their knowledge of the world and integrate it in the essays  to support  their points  of view; this allowed them  to  look  at  the  issues  from  a more situated  perspective.  On  the  other  hand,  the  data also showed that students built textual interaction by including ideas from other sources in order to back up their arguments. This connection with other texts was important  in two ways: First, it helped them to learn more about the topics, and second it helped them to participate in the discourses that surrounded them as social beings. Furthermore, the data also showed that using authoritative references  in their essays allowed the students to approach the audience with more solid and clear arguments, which in the end helped them to achieve their purpose  too.</p>     <p> All in all, throughout the writing experience that was developed in this research  study, the participants  were able to explore different dimensions of writing, including the subjectivity that is imbued by the writers in their texts and the situated social perspective that is expressed in the dialogic communication established between  the authors and their readership. Although there was still concern for linguistic and textual issues, the participants  also took interest  in the content  of their essays; they approached writing in a different way, which allowed them to express their feelings, points of view, and ideas regarding social issues that pertained  to them as members of society, and they were able to take part in the discourses and social practices  that surrounded them.  It was also possible to transcend the classroom practice and integrate external readers in this literacy practice, making it both purposeful and meaningful for the students. </p>     <p>With  regards   to  the  field  of  literacy,  and specifically to EFL writing, this project  has  various implications.  First, it is necessary  to  promote  an approach in which writing is viewed as dynamic action rather than as the passive development of a skill. This action needs to involve a careful process  of reflection on the part of both  teachers and  students, so EFL writing becomes a meaningful  activity rather  than an imposition. Second, it is important  to view writing as  situated  action,  closely related  to the  students' personal  background.  Approaching  writing from this perspective  can  allow learners  to express  their ideas  in a more  self-reliant  way  because they can feel more  confident  when they write about  a topic of their interest. Third, writing should be considered purposeful action; when students have a clear purpose  for writing, this experience  can be very fulfilling and enriching.</p> <hr>     <p><b>Notes</b></p>     <p><sup><a name="num1"></a><a href="#nu1">1</a></sup>See Chala and Chapet&iacute;n (2012) for a detailed account of this perspective.     ]]></body>
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