tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-83649572009-02-21T08:51:47.881-05:00Cortland English DepartmentThis Blog is available to SUNY Cortland English Department staff members. Its main purpose is to facilitate discussion(s) on a variety of relevant department issues. Feel free to respond to or initiate new topics at your discretion. Vaughnhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15879735160497961715noreply@blogger.comBlogger13125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8364957.post-1106107059215547942005-01-19T01:57:00.000-05:002005-01-18T22:57:39.216-05:00reflections<span style="font-family:lucida grande;">I am happy to be reading our concerns about the portfolio requirement and our curriculums here, because, alone and cautious in my novitiate, I have thought many of the same things.</span>
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<br /><span style="font-family:lucida grande;">I don't believe that instruction in writing can be standardized, and the impulse to do so appears to be solely what drives the portfolio system here at Cortland. I always thought the portfolio was intended to be a place where students could look at what they had written and reflect on what they had achieved or whether they had succeeded in pushing themselves to learn something new over the semester's course at all, that it was intended to serve a human and qualitative purpose rather than a statistical one, that it was intended to be a place where student and teacher together could pause and remark on what the student had become, and often, on how the instructor had changed as well.</span>
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<br /><span style="font-family:lucida grande;">Isn't the event of being presented, as a teacher, with two or three revised pieces by a student an opportunity to address concerns beyond those of the academy? It is a time to say, "You know, student X, you really are a compassionate conservative. I mean, on the one hand you have been truly moved by individuals in your life, and you write about that movement with genuine intensity, and yet, at the same time you are willing to consign broad segments of the population to unremitting drudgework in only questionably democratic workplaces because they have taken drugs or because they did poorly in school. You understand both caring and callousness and reconcile them both in a really compelling way in what you have written this semester. But the personal bottom line that comes through in your work is finally caring, not coldness--those who care about those around them and about what they do are worth the world to you, but the others? You have no heart for them. Is that accurate do you think? Did you know that about yourself? I have thoroughly enjoyed reading these papers."</span>
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<br /><span style="font-family:lucida grande;">The portfolio should give us the opportunity to synthesize two or more papers into a coherent whole, to be moved by the whole, and to share the argument that that whole suggests to us with our student. I guess I really do disagree with Vaughn's idea that the exersize of synthesis in our writing assignments is a hopelessly academic affair. We relegate it to the academy to our enduring detriment. It's hard to see how education of any kind could take place without it--which is why its seeming absence from the portfolio system here is so disconcerting.
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<br /><span style="font-family:lucida grande;">I don't care for the Wikipedia project much, because that does seem more terminally academic, and insufficiently personalized for a comp class. I really think that what we are doing as comp teachers is helping students become comfortable with who they are and what their prejudices are through the vehicle of writing, so that they will be able to orient their research in whatever subject they are majoring in most efficiently. With regard to the hypothetical student I was addressing a paragraph ago, I think that guy needs to know that caring and focus are the important thing for him, so that he might consider orienting his career at Cortland toward subjects and subtopics that will give him an avenue for exploring them. If he were doing sociology, he might consider themes of gentleness or societal cohesion or the lack of human recognition in popular culture. And he would understand how deeply he hated the absence of these things, and guard against being too caustic in writing about it. If he were a health major, he might look at the physiological effects of friendship and companionship and their relation to a salubrious lifestyle. I had all kinds of kids in my classes, so many different writers and thinkers, none of which will have a clue what to do with their futures if nobody in their lives tries to really engage with what they are saying and tells them that a) it's OK to think as they do and b) college is the perfect place to explore their ideas.</span>
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<br /><span style="font-family:lucida grande;">The saddest thing about the portfolio was that I never got to see it--the portfolio was compiled for the phantom instructor. The students gave them to me and then I passed them off to others. I graded them on what I saw in class and over the course of their many revisions, but I didn't have the benefit of the portfolio experience of them.</span>
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<br /><span style="font-family:lucida grande;">I'm not prescribing my methods of teaching comp. What I love about Cortland is that every CPN classroom is so different from the next. Students need to be able to choose among diverse mentors of writing, and in that we are all so various and insist on that variety we might have a chance of addressing the unpredicable intellectual needs of our student body. So adopting somebody else's idea of what comp should be (Harvard or Michigan) at our school seems beside the point.</span>
<br /><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/8364957-110610705921554794?l=cortlandenglish.blogspot.com'/></div>mariohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03673294179309328012noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8364957.post-1099408980685200782004-11-02T10:23:00.000-05:002004-11-02T10:25:37.253-05:00Open Source CompositionAn interesting article in <a href="http://www.bgsu.edu/cconline/tayloriley/intro.html"><em>Computers and Composition</em></a> on "Open Source and Academia." For those who don't know, "open source" refers to a particular mode of software development in which the programming code for an application is freely available (as opposed to being encrypted proprietary information as in the case of Microsoft or Apple). The result of this is that a public community of programmers can work together to improve an application.
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<br />Where am I going with this? Well, this article discusses how the Open Source model might be applied to education, and specifically to composition. The fundamental difference here is between our traditional notion of authorship, which is individualistic, private, and proprietary, and a contemporary "networked" mode of composition/production, which is collective, public, and held in common. The <a href="http://www.wikipedia.com">Wikipedia</a> is a good example of how this model works in terms of general knowledge production. The Wikipedia is an encyclopedia that is openly revisable by anyone who wishes to register and join the collective process. The process relies on a type of application known as "wikis" (hence the name).
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<br />[Now one might wonder about the accuracy of the entries, given this public process. It is a fair question. All Open Source projects rely upon the community keeping track of itself and correcting errors as they are discovered. Of course, one might also place this in comparison with "official" sources of information from government to news media with an equal degree of skepticism.]
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<br />Anyway, the point here (and in this article) is to conceive of composition as a site where writing pedagogy follows the open source model. The article gives several examples, but I will give another.
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<br />Let's say we did a wiki pilot program with ten sections of CPN 100, approx. 200 students and five instructors. We could pick a topic, let's say youth culture. We could identify three or four readings that would provide us with basic methods for cultural analysis. We then select a couple online periodicals/sites (b/c they're free) to read regularly. We would ask the students to read these sites and then produce weekly entries for an "encyclopedia" on youth culture. The application would require students to log in so we could track their activities to ensure they were participating. In addition to posting new material each week, starting in week three we might also ask them to revise or extend an existing article. Part of their task would be to create links between their posts and others.
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<br />In class then we could discuss the posts in a variety of ways from style to audience to argumentative structures. We could discuss the importance of having references and incorporating citations as a way to establish legitimacy for an argument. We could chart the most-linked-to articles and discuss their popularity. In addition, we could ask students to write reflective pieces on their work, on the idea of writing process, and so on.
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<br />By the end of the semester, we would have a wikipedia on youth culture with over 2500 entries and a million words. Now imagine what it would be like if we did it with all the sections of CPN 100 ... and CPN 101 the following semester ... and we continued doing this for 3-5 years.
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<br />We would be able to create a substantial record of youth culture written in the voice of Cortland's students. We could create a product that might actually be useful for high school teachers and other college instructors.
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<br />Imagine what would happen if we opened participation to all of SUNY or any comp instructor anywhere. The diversity of perspective could be invaluable.
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<br />And do you think our students would be learning something? Would they be seeing themselves as writers? As writers with an audience and peers? Would they recognize the importance of revision? <div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/8364957-109940898068520078?l=cortlandenglish.blogspot.com'/></div>Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16332373320642700265noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8364957.post-1097785732165191702004-10-14T16:21:00.000-04:002004-10-14T16:28:52.166-04:00one lessonA side-effect of the current portfolio process: students learn that an offstage "someone else" determines whether they pass the course or not and therefore, in the case of an "unacceptable" portfolio, the gradeless portfolio assessment trumps actual grades. The portfolio process can come across as a subtle undercutting of their instructor, for it showcases the instructor's limited ability to make her own decisions about final grades.
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<br />The power of the "instructor behind the curtain" may in practice be checked and kept in balance, but for the student the threat does not produce better writing. It encourages more finger pointing and blaming, especially in CTEs and online teacher review sites. The skipped-record tune is something along these lines: "Didn't help me pass portfolio." Even the positive "Will help u pass portfolio!" is depressing because the words reinforce the role change: CPN instructor not as legitimate educator, but "helper" or aide.
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<br /> <div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/8364957-109778573216519170?l=cortlandenglish.blogspot.com'/></div>Amyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14628870879312363625noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8364957.post-1097684864972108332004-10-13T11:56:00.000-04:002004-10-13T12:27:44.973-04:00moving forwardThings have been a little quiet here for a while, so perhaps I'll see if I can get something started. We had a interesting exchange about values. Some folks here and some folks in the hall have remarked on their agreement with my basic value that CPN might take as its goal helping students to see themselves as writers (see the earlier discussion for more detail on that). It's good to see that we are on the same page, but I'm sure there are those who would disagree. As benign as that value sounds, it stands in opposition, from my perspective anyway, with many of the traditional practices of composition, many of which are institutionalized in our program.
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<br />As I am writing this, I imagine most of you are involved in the process of mid-semester portfolio review. Generally speaking, in rhet/comp scholarship, portfolios serve as a vehicle of reflection on process and development. I am an outsider in the field of rhet/comp in that (among other things) I don't ascribe to the theory of development (i.e. that writing abilities develop in a roughly linear progression). However, setting that aside, I do understand that "best practices" (to use academic/corporate speak) in portfolio-driven pedagogy DO NOT establish portfolios as a gatekeeping mechanism. By doing as we do, we transform what is meant to be a reflective moment into a critical/performative one.
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<br />A typical comp portfolio would include drafts, peer and teacher comments, and other material that documents the writing process and a pattern of developing writing skills. It might include a reflective text where the student would analyze this material to identify this developmental pattern. In evaluative terms it would be a place where the student would do a self-assessment of the work s/he has completed. From the instructor's perspective, it becomes an opportunity for one to get a better sense of a student's writing process and perhaps evaluate the process.
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<br />Needless to say, portfolio pedagogy can prove to be labor intensive for both student and teacher.
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<br />In transforming portfolio evaluation into a PRODUCT-oriented test, we instutionalize a practice that undermines the fundamental pedagogical values of composition as a discipline. By creating committees and passing the portfolios around we do our best to <em>decontextualize</em> student writing, which is exactly opposite of the purpose portfolios are supposed to serve.
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<br />Although I realize quite well that I am stepping into a mine field by saying this, <em>our portfolio evaluation process contravenes every principle of composition pedagogy I can imagine. It is simply bad pedagogy.</em>
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<br />As you may know, the portfolio system in place here was designed to appease faculty in other departments who were concerned about the composition faculty upholding "standards." This attitude is part of a long history in the academy of treating composition as a pseudo-discipline. It is an anti-intellectual position that I will not warrant.
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<br />Such arguments stem from faculty who know little or nothing about the teaching of writing. They want to believe that there is nothing to know about teaching writing, that anyone can do it. It is a belief that stems from their own uncertainty about their writing ability. They want to believe that good writing is simply about correctness and following certain stylistic rules because they believe this is something they can manage.
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<br />We cannot allow other's ignorance to be the foundation of our program.
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<br />I've been through the portfolio process a couple times. You are doing it right now. Tell me exactly what the students are learning. That writing is about getting it "right"? That good writers are people who don't make (many) mistakes? That composition is about jumping through hoops? What?<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/8364957-109768486497210833?l=cortlandenglish.blogspot.com'/></div>Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16332373320642700265noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8364957.post-1096474078458665492004-09-29T15:00:00.000-04:002004-09-29T12:07:58.460-04:00more from AmyYes, yes, yes—Alex’s last paragraph says it nicely: our students are dulled (and maybe we are, too). A critic I’m reading currently for my ENG 306 class refers to it as being “dumbed down” (Carol Bly in _Beyond the Writer’s Workshop_). She targets junk culture and anti-intellectual bias as culprits, as well as outmoded writing instruction—something Alex's posts address, too.
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<br />CPN also lends itself to assignment topics (and composition readers) that are dumbed down. The reading selections are conventional and—especially in the argument readers—about as inspiring as cheese wiz. Predictable topics, predictable responses—and the ones that cater to the “junk culture” (under the auspices of being “relevant” to students) may be the worst. It’s hard to get excited about much of the material presented to students in anthologies as examples of “good writing.”
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<br />When I was hired as an adjunct, I remember being told about constructing the content of CPN classes: “Teach whatever you want—except literature.” Many of us, thankfully, do not abide by that rule, but there it is. What we are assigning (not necessarily the essay assignments themselves) may be part of the problem.
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<br />Amy
<br /><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/8364957-109647407845866549?l=cortlandenglish.blogspot.com'/></div>Amyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14628870879312363625noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8364957.post-1096480247915417862004-09-29T13:47:00.000-04:002004-09-29T13:50:47.916-04:00Realistic & Pragmatic Objectives for CPN StudentsBefore any genuine re-assessment of the composition courses can begin, it seems that we need to determine the immediate and long-term objectives for our students—not necessarily for ourselves. After completing our writing courses, what are the realistic expectations in terms of competency and practical application?
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<br />I submit that many “Composition” (Freshman Writing) programs (not necessarily Professional Writing programs), fall short in adequately preparing students for the types of writing they are likely to use and need beyond graduation. Far too many composition programs focus largely on preparing students primarily for future academic writing, but fall woefully short in preparing them for writing beyond academia. The notion that the majority of our students will end up in lofty professions wherein academic writing and scholarly research will be a significant component of their everyday discourse is a misnomer. Many of our graduates are more likely to end up as managers of “The Gap” or in mid-level management positions at IBM, General Motors, etc.
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<br />The notion that they will be consistently writing synthesis, multiple source, or even argumentative papers is rather unlikely. The skills that would better serve them are more in the areas of group project collaboration, integrating multiple media content, preparing presentations, integrating traditional text documents with other Office applications, such as Excel, Access, Publisher, etc.
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<br />In my judgment, any reform to our Composition program needs to go beyond preparing students for future academic writing only. If we do not adequately prepare them for the types of “real” writing that they are more likely to encounter in their respective careers, then we will have only half fulfilled our mission.
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<br />Vaughn
<br /><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/8364957-109648024791541786?l=cortlandenglish.blogspot.com'/></div>Vaughnhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15879735160497961715noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8364957.post-1096425611285457922004-09-28T22:40:00.000-04:002004-09-28T22:40:11.286-04:00choosing writingI don't see you as a wet blanket, Amy. I think you raise some serious issues. I agree completely that many students are deeply resistant to seeing themselves as writers, and I believe there are multiple ideological/cultural forces at work behind that resistance. I am not suggesting that CPN should or could produce professional writers ready to be paid for their labors. I am instead suggesting that CPN's goal should be to give students the opportunity to incorporate the practice of writing into their lives, both as a mode of learning and as a means of achieving ends.
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<br />I agree this is a difficult task in that the majority of students in CPN do not see themselves as writers and do not write on a regular basis. Indeed many may not write except when it is absolutely necessary. As Amy writes, such students may have difficulty putting together a sentence. With many, the challenge may be further complicated by the fact that they have received poor writing instruction in the past and/or had very negative experiences involving red ink. They believe that writing well is just a trick of some kind. Or they believe that writing well is a matter of learning certain facts, like grammar, for example. Such beliefs reflect the models of education that have largely structured their schooling experiences across the disciplines.
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<br />However, those of us who are writers, and those of us who teach and study writing, know this is not the case. For 70 years study after study has demonstrated quantifiably the marginal at best improvement in long-term writing performance associated with grammar instruction. In more philosophic terms, I daresay that even at the inception of rhetorical instruction in Classical Greece, it was understood that effective writing was not a matter of learning surface techniques. Socrates says as much in <em>The Phaedrus</em>.
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<br />If our students are going to write well it is because they will write on a regular basis. In this they are no better or worse than the rest of us. Unfortunately we and they cannot even count on their coursework to ensure that they will write regularly. It will have to be something that they choose for themselves.
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<br />Convincing students to make such a choice, or even to recognize they have the right/responsibility to make such a choice, is part of the even more difficult challenge of demonstrating to students that now they are in college their education is <em>their own</em> responsibility. Undoubtedly many students will never recognize this responsibility, and they will deny themselves their own education as a result. Undoubtedly many students will never take on the responsibility of becoming a writer and they may discover that while their degree got them a job, their lack of writing skills prevents them from being successful at it.
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<br />In my view, CPN can be an invitation to participate in the experience of intellectual growth college represents and the intimate role writing plays in that experience. If students refuse the invitation (and perhaps many will), so be it. However, I would hope that they realize that they are refusing it, that intellectual growth and its rewards are there for them if they choose to step up to the challenge. My main concern is that many of them may be so downtrodden and dulled by high school that they cannot see or understand what is before them. CPN can help them see that choice, understand its consequences, and demonstrate that making the choice to learn is their privilege, if not their responsibility, as a human and a citizen of the world.
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<br />Did I say that? Huh, how uncharacteristicly earnest of me...<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/8364957-109642561128545792?l=cortlandenglish.blogspot.com'/></div>Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16332373320642700265noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8364957.post-1096408011068440972004-09-28T17:44:00.000-04:002004-09-28T17:46:51.066-04:00from AmyI’ll be the wet blanket: I remain skeptical of the idea that CPN’s purpose is to help students think of themselves as writers. Advanced writing classes, yes. CPN, how? Does an intro class on geology create geologists? If out of that class there are a few students who want to dedicate their lives to writing or geology, fabulous. But the majority of the students are in CPN for one reason only: because they have to be. Most recognize they must be able to write competently for their other classes, but they could care less about the higher virtues of a writer’s mind and life. I approach math in a similar way: I’m glad I learned to add, subtract, and multiply (we’ll skip division if you don’t mind), but I care less about mathematical theory and no amount of talk about the universe’s mathematical essence is going to make me think of myself as a mathematician. Literature and writing are my chosen loves, yes. But I don’t think they’re the only loves to choose—music and fine art and gardening (and maybe even math) are other forms good for love, too.
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<br /> I agree that we should throw students material that is unconventional and challenging and exciting. But I throw it out knowing that not everyone is going to get excited by it in the same ways. Those that do will (I hope) take more writing classes and learn to see themselves as writers.
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<br />In the meantime, there’s a student (times 20) in CPN who can’t write a complete sentence, doesn’t understand punctuation, and can’t organize an essay. It’s not creative nonfiction—it’s non-nonfiction. In an intro-level academic writing class, I think my approach to that student needs to be practical.
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<br />I said at the start I remain skeptical, but not totally closed or committed to my point of view. It’s nice to have this forum to bounce around these ideas and to speak about our profession so candidly. Next!
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<br />Yours,
<br />Amy
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<br /><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/8364957-109640801106844097?l=cortlandenglish.blogspot.com'/></div>Amyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14628870879312363625noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8364957.post-1096394414244480342004-09-28T13:23:00.000-04:002004-09-28T14:00:14.243-04:00My Two CentsI agree with Alex about 99% (I don't want to confront students with material that is so disturbing or offensive that they totally disengage themselves) and wish ardently that we could break away from the notion that we are teaching as a service to the other departments (in effect, saying we are preparing students for certain majors or professions is tantamount to the same thing). Do we not want people tp learn to write in the same way that we want them to learn to read--broadly, variably, voraciosly, creatively? Rather than anticipating what the administration and other faculty will or will not let us do, let's imagine what we would most like to do, and work backward from there toward the compromises we will inevitably have to make. If we are preparing people for a lifetime of writing (a lifetime which could extend sixty or seventy years beyond the months spent in our classes and into a world we can hardly even conceive of now!), what kinds of experiences and knowledges do we need to provide?
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<br />P.S. I think Power Point is very dangerous and I would not like to see it accepted as a major part of what we assess as student "writing." Power Point dumbs students down in the same way that soundbites make people feel informed when they are't. "Reading" Power Point presentations, students come to think a small bit of the total picture is all that's important. "Writing" Power Point presentations, they come to think that when they write a word or a phrase, they are communicating a raft of unspoken context which in fact, does not exist. It makes them think they can write in shorthand and readers will fill in all the blanks for them. It's not even shorthand, because shorthand is a real code....can you tell Power Point is a pet peeve of mine? <div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/8364957-109639441424448034?l=cortlandenglish.blogspot.com'/></div>A. Wiegardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02179648562304252240noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8364957.post-1096282144759276352004-09-27T06:40:00.000-04:002004-09-27T06:49:04.760-04:00re Alex, Mary, & VaughnColleagues,
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<br />Vaughn argues that CPN courses need revising; Alex agrees, and urges us begin by identifying our goals. Alex’s key goal is to help students see themselves as writers. Ross has also echoed this concern.
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<br />We may need to consider the questions, What is a writer? and What kinds of writers can we be? Writers are, of course, concerned with process. One crucial part of the writing process that our students wrestle with is revising. Maybe we need to resurrect our discussion of the nature of revising and ways to teach it.
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<br />If we have been charged with serving the writing needs of other departments, then we also need to concern ourselves with product. Faculty in other departments want our students to write expository pieces: Randi Storch (History) requires her freshmen to write analyses; Mary McGuire (Political Science) asks her freshmen to construct arguments. Perhaps we should borrow from the Harvard model, which includes analysis and argument in the first of the Expository Writing courses.
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<br />Vaughn links writing to the product demands of business. To that end…
<br />- Business (as one frustrated Niagara Mohawk trainer reminded me about 12 years ago) needs employees who can write clearly and concisely, regardless of the specific product.
<br />- Business consultant Tom Peters has often emphasized the need for creative risk-takers. Students can view themselves in that light by understanding that their thesis statements are (should be) pushing the envelope of our understanding. In that way, those messages are argumentative and they expose their authors to scrutiny – a risky situation.
<br />- “Literacy” now includes technological skills. A few months ago, an article in either the New York Times or the Syracuse Post Standard (I have the article at my campus office, tomorrow I’ll post the reference) reviewed some universities’ steps to incorporate multi-media in their writing programs. We could take a similar move by allowing students to use PowerPoint for certain assignments, perhaps minor ones (e.g. journals) at first.
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<br />In my Sci-Fi class (not a WI course), I’ve offered students the chance to use PowerPoint and other media to satisfy the requirements of major assignments. For those students who have taken the risk, the results have often been encouraging, if not successful.
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<br />Two other comments:
<br />- Students can take advantage of their individual learning styles preferences as they move through the invention and revision processes. In this way, writing can be more “comfortable,” enjoyable, and productive for the student.
<br />- Students can realize the relevance of their language skills – including speaking and listening skills – through service-learning courses.
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<br />john
<br /><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/8364957-109628214475927635?l=cortlandenglish.blogspot.com'/></div>johnsuarezhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17155684080935180689noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8364957.post-1096055755940002472004-09-24T18:55:00.000-04:002004-09-24T15:55:55.940-04:00IMHOJust to present an alternative/additional perspective on this matter. To revise the program one begins with an examination of the program goals. I submit the following as <em>the</em> goal of CPN:
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<br />To help students come to see themselves as “writers:” that is, as people who use writing as a means of producing and communication knowledge and getting things done in the world.
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<br />As a secondary set of goals you could include help students write “well” or “effectively” or even “beautifully.” But I would contend that people who do not see themselves as writers will care little about being about to write well.
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<br />Unfortunately, our students do not see themselves as writers, though they are not unusual in this regard. I will omit an explanation of why this is the case, though I think exploring how this happens could give us insight into what we need to do as teachers.
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<br />I think the immediate response to this observation is an expressivist rhetoric a la Donald Murray: give students the freedom to express themselves and find their voices. Another familiar response is a liberatory one that articulates these issues in ideological terms: becoming a writer is a means of political empowerment. The intersection of these two is old news in feminism, finding “a room of one’s own.” Indeed one might say that the dominant mode of rhetoric/composition theory for the last twenty years builds on this response.
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<br />Put them together and what does it spell?
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<br />1. Students need to take some pleasure in writing or it will never work. Academic discourse has been thoroughly murdered for them, so you can forget about that genre. No one wants to write that crap.
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<br />2. A mild dose of <em>ressentiment</em> might not be a bad thing. Students should be able to recognize how red ink and sentence diagramming (or whatever form of grammar-torture is in vogue these days) has tried to choke thought and life out of their bodies.
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<br />(n.b. I have to remark here. My daughter just started kindergarten. The one common theme I’ve picked up on so far is that she and her classmates get complimented at least once a day on their silence. I guess I don’t have to wonder why it’s so hard to get students to talk in class, n’est pas?)
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<br />3. Just b/c “three is the magic number:” again IMHO, what students <em>need</em> to learn in college, not just CPN but the whole thing, is that they have a much right as any human to participate in the production of cultural knowledge of any kind, and the ability to do so is largely rhetorical. Sure, part of rhetoric is convincing your audience of your authority (e.g. by showing them your degree or whatever). But that’s only part. MLK jr didn’t convince folks b/c of his bonafides. On the flipside, G. Bush part deux didn’t win any votes by showing people his MBA transcripts either. To quote <em> Hedwig and the Angry Inch</em>, “long story short,” writing/rhetoric is as crucial to cultural power in our society as it was in Classical Greece.
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<br />I realize I am presenting CPN <em>writ large</em>, but that is b/c (partly as a rhetorician) I see rhetoric as a central concept in human history and civilization (which, of course, is why I become a rhetorician). And CPN is the one place where rhetoric is addressed to all of our students.
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<br />So, after 560-odd (very odd) words, what id/is my alternative/additional view of CPN?
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<br />Don’t care about grammar or correctness of any kind. Do you call up the police when you see someone run a Stop sign or speeding or smoke a joint? Do you want to be a police person?
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<br />Expose our students to material they don’t understand. Like a flasher in a park before a ten year-old, the material should be totally inappropriate (though perhaps not illegal). Force them to make sense of experiences they don’t understand. Force them to see that they do not understand their everyday experiences any better than they understand these inscrutable readings.
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<br />Teach them that writing is the answer. Explanations for experiences exist neither inside (their common sense) nor outside (in the mouths of professors or pundits or media). Writing is the process through which ineffable/particular experience <em>becomes</em> a part of consciousness.
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<br />I invite/invoke your response.
<br /><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/8364957-109605575594000247?l=cortlandenglish.blogspot.com'/></div>Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16332373320642700265noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8364957.post-1095438639656012432004-09-17T12:19:00.000-04:002004-09-17T12:30:39.656-04:00Harvard's Expository Writing ProgramWhat would you say to a writing requirement along the lines of Harvard's?
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<br />Students take Expos 10 and Expos 20 described below. The descriptions are from http://www.fas.harvard.edu if you would like to read more.
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<br />Expos 10 is organized around three sequences of instruction, and requires three drafted and fully revised essays of increasing complexity. Each segment of the course includes reading, class discussions, informal lectures on aspects of essay-writing technique (introductions, transitions, paragraph structure, style), predraft writing assignments, workshops, peer-group work, and two conferences with the instructor--a predraft conference and a revision conference. And though Expos 10 does not focus on a specialized content or theme, it recognizes that writers must have something to write about. Thus, each of the essays asks students to engage a specific topic, while offering as much choice about that topic as possible.
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<br />Essay 1 typically begins with the close reading and analysis of a text, two skills essential to academic writing. (As an alternative, Essay 1 may begin with the primary evidence of the students' own experience.) Students learn how to focus their thinking by identifying a question or problem to write about and how to develop their thinking with evidence in order to come to their own ideas. Texts for this assignment may include short stories by writers such as Raymond Carver, Ernest Hemingway, and Susan Minot or essays by George Orwell, Richard Rodriguez, Alice Walker, and others.
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<br />Essay 2 builds on the skills of the first essay and adds to them by requiring students to handle more than one source, often adding secondary sources to a central primary source, and often including personal evidence as well as textual evidence. Students learn to build their own argument and come to their own conclusion—their own idea—by taking more than one source into account. Such an assignment generally requires a more complex essay structure as well as the evaluation and documentation of sources. Texts for this assignment may address questions of morality, violence, racism, education, political oppression, personal identity, and may include fiction as well as argumentative essays and other sources.
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<br />Essay 3 is a controlled research essay, an argument based on multiple sources. This is the longest (8 to 10 pages) and most complex essay of the course, requiring students to call on all the skills they've practiced in Essays 1 and 2, and to move beyond them. Students work most independently on this essay, choosing their own topics or defining their particular focus within a common field of inquiry. If the field of inquiry is education, for instance, and a student is interested in issues of cultural and ethnic identity within education (or the politics of standardized testing, or how college admissions policies affect high school curricula, to offer two other examples), the student's own interest might lead him or her to additional research beyond those sources provided by the instructor.
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<br />Expos 20 Requirements
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<br />The program takes pains to ensure that the amount of reading and writing is roughly the same in all of its courses. Every preceptor (the faculty rank of all Expos instructors) will require you to write four essays, between five and ten pages long. Although each essay will require you to make an argument, the papers will be of different kinds, reflecting different approaches to the particular subject you are considering, but reflecting also the range of assignment types at Harvard. Most essays will involve close-reading of textual evidence, and several will require you to use sources of different kinds--so you can expect to spend time discussing how to integrate and cite sources, and how to avoid plagiarism.
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<br />To prepare for each essay, you will write one or more short assignments or exercises, and you will revise each paper at least once. You will have a conference with your preceptor about each paper--in most cases between the draft and the revision. Because this process is fast-paced and demands constant writing, it is critical that you budget your time so as not to fall behind in your Expos work. Your preceptor will hand out a description of the program-wide policy on completing work.
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<br />Finally, since every Expos class is conducted as a seminar, your preceptor will not only welcome but count on your participation in discussions. Because this seminar meets only twice per week for only 50 minutes, and the classes build on each other, your preceptor will expect consistent attendance (and again will hand out a program-wide description of policies). At least three or four class discussions will consider drafts by students in the class, but all discussions will have good writing--the lucid and lively articulation of a complex argument--as their focus and goal.
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<br />Mary
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<br /><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/8364957-109543863965601243?l=cortlandenglish.blogspot.com'/></div>maryhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00123819070563506449noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8364957.post-1095435009660931332004-09-17T11:24:00.000-04:002004-09-17T11:30:09.660-04:00Proposal to Change Academic Writing Core CoursesTO: English Department / Composition Instructors
<br />FROM: Vaughn
<br />RE: Proposal to Modify Academic Writing
<br />DATE: 09/17/04
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<br />Based on the discussion at the Composition Staff meeting in May, it seems that there is some sentiment suggesting that our current Composition Program may be in need of some revivification, or, at least, an infusion of some fresh ideas.
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<br />The following salient questions seemed to have emerged from the meeting:
<br />1. How can we improve, change, or modify the exiting program to make it more effective for both the teaching staff, as well as our students?
<br />2. How can we improve the content to make it more relevant for our students’ needs — both academic and professional?
<br />3. How can we make our program, including individual courses, more attractive to our students, so they don’t continue coming into these courses “kicking and screaming”?
<br />4. How can we mitigate the cheating/plagiarism situation?
<br />5. How can we improve the evaluation of students’ work?
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<br />I would like to put forth a proposal that I feel would—at least in part—address some of these concerns, particularly 1-4.
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<br />Academic Writing 100:
<br />· Completely restructure this course to allow for assignments to be determined by instructor preference (rather than exiting program guidelines) — provided that the assignments meet certain criteria: quality of insight, good organization, proper development, effective technical control, and appropriate style.
<br />· Increase the number and diversity of “smaller” writing assignments. I would personally like to include more of the following: proposal, grant, and resume writing; collaborative writing assignments, very common in both the public and private sectors; producing documents that effectively integrate text and graphics; writing for presentations; etc.
<br />· I would recommend including a wide range of activities, group projects, presentations, etc. focused intensively on the principles of Research & Documentation, with particular emphasis on Academic Dishonesty and Plagiarism — perhaps even doing an assessment of one of the “Paper Mill” sites on line. I would require that they write a summary essay to include their understanding of the institutional policies regarding Academic Dishonesty as set forth in the Cortland College Handbook.
<br />· I would limit the number of formal “prepared essays” to one or two, requiring that only one be based on sources, ideally to demonstrate students’ understanding of what they learned vis-à-vis the previous item. I would keep the “full-blown” Research Paper in Academic Writing 101.
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<br />Academic Writing 101:
<br />· In attempt to make this course more relevant to our students’ needs, as well as give them a greater degree of choice, I would recommend offering at least 5 variations of Academic Writing II. Most of the writing would be academic in nature, requiring the students to work with and integrate a variety of written sources:
<br />· CPN 101-A-- General Composition: This variation would be for students who have not yet declared a major or have no particular preference for either of the other variations. The course might be constructed similarly to what we now offer.
<br />· CPN 101-B-- Writing for English, Journalism, or Professional Writing: The content of this course speaks for itself.
<br />· CPN 101-C-- Writing for Business & Economics: The content of this course speaks for itself.
<br />· CPN 101-D-- Writing for Social and Physical Sciences: The content of this course speaks for itself.
<br />· CPN 101-E-- Writing for Recreation & Sports Management: The content of this course speaks for itself.
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<br />Although these proposals would likely create more work and preparation on our part (at least initially), I feel we would better serve our students in the long run, while at the same time giving them a greater degree of choice in fulfilling their Composition requirements.
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<br />Obviously, this is only a prototype proposal, which would be subject to further input and modification.
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<br />Vaughn
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<br /><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/8364957-109543500966093133?l=cortlandenglish.blogspot.com'/></div>Vaughnhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15879735160497961715noreply@blogger.com0