Title : "If reading opens up a world of imagination and possibility then speaking and listening opens up a lifetime of empowerment a chance for those who too often feel invisible in their own country to be heard."
link : "If reading opens up a world of imagination and possibility then speaking and listening opens up a lifetime of empowerment a chance for those who too often feel invisible in their own country to be heard."
"If reading opens up a world of imagination and possibility then speaking and listening opens up a lifetime of empowerment a chance for those who too often feel invisible in their own country to be heard."
Labour will announce a review of the national curriculum that will seek to “weave oracy into lessons throughout school”....
Geoff Barton, the general secretary of the Association for School and College Leaders, said: “Oracy should be a core entitlement, and held in the same regard as reading and writing. Indeed, if students can articulate effectively in conversation, they are more likely to be assured readers and able to express themselves well in writing.”
Oracy. I don't remember seeing that word before, perfectly easy though it is to understand. The OED traces it back to 1965 where we see the author coining a set of words:
1965 A. Wilkinson Spoken Eng. 14 The term we suggest for general ability in the oral skills is oracy; one who has those skills is orate, one without them inorate.
"Oracy" goes nicely with "literacy." Note that, in the grand scheme of human history, literacy may undermine oracy. The OED also has this quote:
1972 T. A. Shippey Old Eng. Verse iv. 89 Though literacy and the fixed text may have killed ‘oracy’ in the long run, the change need not have happened as quickly as in the present century.
The decline of oracy is an interesting topic, as people today communicate in text and hesitate to make a phone call. Of course, I'm writing this to you. We're not speaking.
Oracy is something we can talk about. I mean, write about. I say "talk about" when I mean write about. And I say "I say" when I mean "I write." But keep in mind when you do talk about it... write about it... that it's something they say over in England. I checked the NYT archive, and the word "oracy" has never appeared, so I think in America, you'll get bogged down talking about the word itself. As I just did.
Labour will announce a review of the national curriculum that will seek to “weave oracy into lessons throughout school”....
Geoff Barton, the general secretary of the Association for School and College Leaders, said: “Oracy should be a core entitlement, and held in the same regard as reading and writing. Indeed, if students can articulate effectively in conversation, they are more likely to be assured readers and able to express themselves well in writing.”
Oracy. I don't remember seeing that word before, perfectly easy though it is to understand. The OED traces it back to 1965 where we see the author coining a set of words:
1965 A. Wilkinson Spoken Eng. 14 The term we suggest for general ability in the oral skills is oracy; one who has those skills is
"Oracy" goes nicely with "literacy." Note that, in the grand scheme of human history, literacy may undermine oracy. The OED also has this quote:
1972 T. A. Shippey Old Eng. Verse iv. 89 Though literacy and the fixed text may have killed ‘oracy’ in the long run, the change need not have happened as quickly as in the present century.
The decline of oracy is an interesting topic, as people today communicate in text and hesitate to make a phone call. Of course, I'm writing this to you. We're not speaking.
Oracy is something we can talk about. I mean, write about. I say "talk about" when I mean write about. And I say "I say" when I mean "I write." But keep in mind when you do talk about it... write about it... that it's something they say over in England. I checked the NYT archive, and the word "oracy" has never appeared, so I think in America, you'll get bogged down talking about the word itself. As I just did.
Thus articles "If reading opens up a world of imagination and possibility then speaking and listening opens up a lifetime of empowerment a chance for those who too often feel invisible in their own country to be heard."
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