As I read Kathleen E. Welch's Ideology and Freshman Textbook Production: The Place of Theory in Writing Pedagogy, I couldn't help but remember my own undergraduate composition courses. I remember very well those modes Welch discusses. I never understood what exposition was and when I would ever use it in a real life writing scenario, and I always wondered what made one argument more persuasive than the next. I also remember poring over models the instructors gave the class, trying to figure out how to write something as moving as Martin Luther King Jr.'s " I Have a Dream." Or attempting to write something as creative as Margaret Atwood. Mostly, I left class feeling frustrated and defeated.
This is why I particularly like the Norton Field Guide writing textbook. While I encourage students to read it (I don't look kindly on those who don't read) and use it in the classroom, I do agree with Welch when she says, "the textbooks are instruction material more important for the writing teacher than for the writing student." I find myself underlining points in the book that I want to highlight for my students, strategies I think they will find useful. I also take some of the strategies presented in the text and model them in class. To the point, I use the textbook to help me learn how to teach, but I don't completely rely on it for my classroom instruction. But I think that although the NFG includes sample essays and exceprts, it usually attempts to contextualize the excerpt for the student writer, emphasizing the rhetorical importance and rhetorical situation of the piece of writing at hand.
Welch argues that we should "press forward the movement to subordinate the status of the textbook in favor of student text production." I don't think we can completely do away with the textbook or sample writing (it is useful to analyze a text and how it works when undertaking a new writing project), but I agree with her that student writing should be priority. To this end, I have been having my students draft portions of their papers and bring them to class, working on Paper 2. I had one of them email a copy of their draft to me with the last paper, and I printed it out on a transparency. As a class, we read through the writing. We didn't try to fix grammar or sentence structure. Instead, we focused on what the text was doing and how it did it. The student/volunteer left with a lot of notes and suggestions. And the other students were able to see a project unfinished and unpolished. They are all also more comfortable workshopping one another's drafts.
So, yes, I agree with Welch that we should throw out the perfect excerpts and samples, or at least push student writing to the foreground.
Sunday, February 8, 2009
Sunday, February 1, 2009
Re-thinking Genre
Devitt notes in "Generalizing about Genre: New Conceptions of an Old Concept," that "based on our identification of genre, we make assumptions not only about the form but also the text's purposes, its subject matter, its writer, and its expected reader" (575). We have talked about this concept in class this week as we began discussing reading and analyzing texts.
Particularly, on Friday, we reviewed rhetorical situations and how they help us read a text. As the students offered parts of rhetorical situation for discussion, one insightful student commented that all of these parts work together. I had been trying to get them to realize this since the beginning of the semester, but Friday, the light came on. He elaborated that the form/media/design an author chooses directly corresponds to the intended audience and purpose of the text. Hallelujah! There was much rejoicing in the land!
To drive the point home a little more and to illustrate the kind of close reading we would perform over the next several weeks, we re-read the 9/11 Commission Report excerpt in the Norton Field Guide textbook, examining it specifically in the context of the purpose, the content, the form, the media, the design, and the audience and what these things reveal to us about the text.
Once we had successfully analyzed the text (at least to the point that they were tired of talking about it), I passed around my personal copy of the 9/11 Commission Report in graphic novel form. The discussion that followed allowed us to think about and discuss why someone would feel it necessary to alter the design or genre of the report. Who was the audience? Did the text reach an entirely different audience than the report itself. Because the content had not changed (the wording is still the same) the students decided that this text would be read more readily (haha) by those who tend to read graphic novels. That the form also allowed the reader a more a visual connection to a report full of facts and times. While they thought the report itself evoked emotion, the pretty much unanimously decided that seeing graphic representations of the burning towers evoked a stronger response. We proceeded to compare the two texts side by side, looking for further similarities and differences in rhetorical situation. What was the purpose of the graphic novel? Was its purpose different from the report in the textbook? Hopefully, this excercise helped them to think of rhetorical situation and genre (I know I'm supposed to be talking about genre) in a more concrete way.
Ok. To end these musings (although I find them personally productive) and to return to the article at hand, I found it noteworthy that Devitt stresses the importance of thinking about genre not only in terms of reading, but writing. She explains, "Prewriting and revising processes probably differ for different genres, since those genres represent different situations, including constraints" (584). Personally, I find it easier to think about genre in terms of what I'm reading as opposed to what I'm writing most of the time. Unless I'm writing something like an abstract, a cv, or a proposal letter, I rarely consciously consider the genre. I don't think (in fact I know) that most of my students don't consider genre when they're writing either. The guidelines in the assignment sheet spells the rhetorical situation out for them, and we talk about it in class, but I don't know that many of them actually think about it when they revise (if they revise). Therefore, I have decided that for the next paper, I'm going to have a revision/workshop day where they examine their rhetorical situation and genre closely i nterms of the choices they make when writing. You know, I think I'm learning much more than my students.
Particularly, on Friday, we reviewed rhetorical situations and how they help us read a text. As the students offered parts of rhetorical situation for discussion, one insightful student commented that all of these parts work together. I had been trying to get them to realize this since the beginning of the semester, but Friday, the light came on. He elaborated that the form/media/design an author chooses directly corresponds to the intended audience and purpose of the text. Hallelujah! There was much rejoicing in the land!
To drive the point home a little more and to illustrate the kind of close reading we would perform over the next several weeks, we re-read the 9/11 Commission Report excerpt in the Norton Field Guide textbook, examining it specifically in the context of the purpose, the content, the form, the media, the design, and the audience and what these things reveal to us about the text.
Once we had successfully analyzed the text (at least to the point that they were tired of talking about it), I passed around my personal copy of the 9/11 Commission Report in graphic novel form. The discussion that followed allowed us to think about and discuss why someone would feel it necessary to alter the design or genre of the report. Who was the audience? Did the text reach an entirely different audience than the report itself. Because the content had not changed (the wording is still the same) the students decided that this text would be read more readily (haha) by those who tend to read graphic novels. That the form also allowed the reader a more a visual connection to a report full of facts and times. While they thought the report itself evoked emotion, the pretty much unanimously decided that seeing graphic representations of the burning towers evoked a stronger response. We proceeded to compare the two texts side by side, looking for further similarities and differences in rhetorical situation. What was the purpose of the graphic novel? Was its purpose different from the report in the textbook? Hopefully, this excercise helped them to think of rhetorical situation and genre (I know I'm supposed to be talking about genre) in a more concrete way.
Ok. To end these musings (although I find them personally productive) and to return to the article at hand, I found it noteworthy that Devitt stresses the importance of thinking about genre not only in terms of reading, but writing. She explains, "Prewriting and revising processes probably differ for different genres, since those genres represent different situations, including constraints" (584). Personally, I find it easier to think about genre in terms of what I'm reading as opposed to what I'm writing most of the time. Unless I'm writing something like an abstract, a cv, or a proposal letter, I rarely consciously consider the genre. I don't think (in fact I know) that most of my students don't consider genre when they're writing either. The guidelines in the assignment sheet spells the rhetorical situation out for them, and we talk about it in class, but I don't know that many of them actually think about it when they revise (if they revise). Therefore, I have decided that for the next paper, I'm going to have a revision/workshop day where they examine their rhetorical situation and genre closely i nterms of the choices they make when writing. You know, I think I'm learning much more than my students.
Tuesday, January 20, 2009
Being "Wonderfully Reflexive"
On Wednesday, I asked students to take a few moments to free-write what they thought reading and writing meant. I had not originally planned to do this, but I had two new students and thought I should take a couple of minutes to give out course policies, syllabi, etc. It turned out really well. As we discussed definitions of reading, writing, meta-reading, and meta-writing, the free write allowed them to collect their thoughts on the issues at hand. They all had some pretty interesting things to say.
Students' responses to my next question were even more interesting. I asked them if they thought they were readers and writers. Some answered in the affirmative, but most didn't consider themselves to be either. I asked one particular student who looked quite ashamed of himself (I guess because he thought he should be a reader and a writer) why he didn't consider himself a reader. He told me that he didn't really read anything outside of school. As we debated what a reader is, I pointed out that the definition we had come up with in class did not limit reading to simply books or print. The guy perked up and said that he belonged to a "movie group." He and some of his friends get together each week, and watch movies. Then, they sit around and "talk about them." The class determined that since he does read for school, that he does read emails, text messages, and "reads" movies, that he is a reader.
This scenario played out similarly about writers. But as I read the Hesse article, I began to think about myself as both teacher and student. I have always fancied myself a reader, but I began to wonder, do I consider myself a writer? What is a writer? I came to the conclusion that until last semester, I didn't think of myself as a writer, perhaps a writer wannabe. Somewhere in the midst of practicum and meetings with my writing group in the Fall, I became a writer. Therefore, I cannot judge my students for having their own doubts and misconceptions. Instead, I need to be honest with them about my own educational experiences, relate to them because I am still learning too.
Finally, to end my ramblings--that, it seems, don't exactly relate to the Hesse article, but hopefully does show that the article made me think about myself and my students--I turn to the articles the students will be reading related to our course theme. I'm sure that many of them will have some of the same reactions Hesse mentions (the same reactions many of us have had about articles we've read for classes), but I think by examining not only what the articles say, but also how they say it, perhaps we can decenter these knee-jerk responses. I too will need to remember to keep the knee-jerking to a minimum as I re-read some of them, for after all, I'm a lit person, not a biologist.
Students' responses to my next question were even more interesting. I asked them if they thought they were readers and writers. Some answered in the affirmative, but most didn't consider themselves to be either. I asked one particular student who looked quite ashamed of himself (I guess because he thought he should be a reader and a writer) why he didn't consider himself a reader. He told me that he didn't really read anything outside of school. As we debated what a reader is, I pointed out that the definition we had come up with in class did not limit reading to simply books or print. The guy perked up and said that he belonged to a "movie group." He and some of his friends get together each week, and watch movies. Then, they sit around and "talk about them." The class determined that since he does read for school, that he does read emails, text messages, and "reads" movies, that he is a reader.
This scenario played out similarly about writers. But as I read the Hesse article, I began to think about myself as both teacher and student. I have always fancied myself a reader, but I began to wonder, do I consider myself a writer? What is a writer? I came to the conclusion that until last semester, I didn't think of myself as a writer, perhaps a writer wannabe. Somewhere in the midst of practicum and meetings with my writing group in the Fall, I became a writer. Therefore, I cannot judge my students for having their own doubts and misconceptions. Instead, I need to be honest with them about my own educational experiences, relate to them because I am still learning too.
Finally, to end my ramblings--that, it seems, don't exactly relate to the Hesse article, but hopefully does show that the article made me think about myself and my students--I turn to the articles the students will be reading related to our course theme. I'm sure that many of them will have some of the same reactions Hesse mentions (the same reactions many of us have had about articles we've read for classes), but I think by examining not only what the articles say, but also how they say it, perhaps we can decenter these knee-jerk responses. I too will need to remember to keep the knee-jerking to a minimum as I re-read some of them, for after all, I'm a lit person, not a biologist.
Saturday, November 29, 2008
First Blog
I just want to take a moment to thank Alex. If not for his blog post, I would have completely forgotten to complete this for Monday. It is for Monday, right? If you can't tell, the end of the semester has completely fried my brain. As soon as it's over, I am giving it a much needed break. Stupid t.v. show watching, anyone?
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