The age of the children when they wrote their projects - 8-11 years - is one in which literacy is still extending and developing. They are just starting to "spread their wings" as writers, exploring an ever-increasing range of genres and discourse types. Their writing is, moreover, closely bound up with extensive use of visual material - drawings, photographs, cuttings from magazines and computerized encyclopedias - making it a challenge for corpus encoding.
The LCPW is a computerized representation of the primary data and other related material. It attempts to capture as much useful information as possible about the original projects, such as their appearance, their textual content and grammatical characteristics, and what the children and others said about them. (See also Features and How to Use the Corpus.)
For the purposes of the electronic corpus we have
The corpus can be explored in the following ways:
(as at 10 April 2001) The most complete data is for the Core Sample children (see above) in the series 5.1 Animals, 5.3 Birds and 6.2 Free Choice.
For each of these projects there should be page scans, transcription, POS-tagged version, and notes on physical characteristics. We are just doing the last stages of proofreading before making the transcriptions and POS-tagged versions available from the download button. We plan to put the other projects (Non-Core Sample 5.1, 5.3 and 6.2, plus all the remaining material for 4.1 Free Choice and 4.2 Free Choice) on the site in the next few weeks.
If you have any general queries regarding the LCCWP, please contact Roz Ivanic (r.ivanic@lancaster.ac.uk) or Tony McEnery (a.mcenery@lancaster.ac.uk), the project directors.
On questions relating to the content and design of the website, please contact Nick Smith (n.i.smith@lancaster.ac.uk).
Ivanic, R. (1999) Literacies and epistemologies in primary education. In Tosi A. and Leung C. (eds) Rethinking Language Education. London: Centre for Information on Language Teaching and Research.
Ormerod F., and Ivanic, R. (1999) Texts in Practices: Interpreting the physical characteristics of texts. In Barton, D., Hamilton, M., and Ivanic, R. (eds). Situated Literacies. London: Routledge.
Smith, N., McEnery A. and Ivanic, R. (1998) Issues in Transcribing a Corpus of Children's Handwritten Projects. Literary and Linguistic Computing, Vol.13, No.4. Oxford: OUP.
To order a copy of the report, please contact Elaine Heron, e.heron@lancaster.ac.uk
(Price = UK£3-00, as at 11 May 00)The Computer Corpus
Organisation of the Corpus
Features of the Corpus
Please refer to How to use the corpus for further information.
Current availability of material
Contacting us
References
Full documentation on the corpus and associated research is contained in the Final Report to the Leverhulme Trust.
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