September 12, 2013
I
asked Mehmas what he wanted to focus on, and he told me his writing is his
weakest area. He showed me an article on American bullfrog tadpoles that he had
to outline in his composition class. I felt for him because I had a hard time
finding a thesis statement, for example! Perhaps some articles don’t function
like a five paragraph essay. Still, it’s confusing. I want to bring in a more
traditional essay next week to help build his confidence and skills. We
discussed indenting to show a new paragraph, as well.
Then,
I wanted to discuss the passive voice. When Mehmas invited me over for dinner,
we spoke of his name. “Mehmas is not common in Kuwait ,
but in Saudi Arabia
many people is names Mehmas,” he told me.
“Is
not past tense!” he told me. “Why is it named?”
“I
will…tell you next week!” I promised. In the meantime, I thought about it and
realized that sentence is passive. If it was in active voice, he would have
said, “Many people name their children Mehmas in Saudi Arabia .”
I
brought up the passive tense in tutoring, and we spent time switching from
passive to active voice. First, I reminded Mehmas about how every verb has
three forms: present, past, and past participle. I knew he was familiar with
this concept because he had shown me his picture dictionary from Foundations
with the columns of irregular verbs. We used sentences like, “Luis was taken
home,” and “The water was spilled.” I mentioned that the passive voice is good
for avoiding who did the action. If
we know who did it, though, we can then switch to active: “Rose took Luis
home,” and “The boy spilled the water.” He seemed to catch on, but of course
we’ll need to practice this week, too. I told him it’s common to see passive
voice in newspapers, so we’ll need to find some!
Great job, Rosalie! Many languages do not have the passive voice, or even if they do, it's not used as commonly as the English language.
ReplyDeleteYeah, it is very common, isn't it! We'll have to keep working on it :) Thank you!
ReplyDelete