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Folks:
The posting below describes a list of simple practices that,
if even one were implemented, might transform the way a professor
assigns, discusses, and responds to student writing. Originally
created as a faculty development resource for use in workshops
on teaching writing, it is co-authored by Jane Kokernak, M.A.,
Writing Center Supervisor, Mount Ida College and Lowry Pei, Ph.D.,
Professor of English, Simmons College.
Regards,
Rick Reis
reis@stanford.edu
UP NEXT: Leading Initiatives for Integrative Learning
Tomorrow's Teaching and Learning
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11 Things You Could Start Doing Today for the Benefit of Your
Students' Writing
The spread of the writing process and writing across the curriculum
movements means that today's faculty who teach or use writing
in their courses understand that it is both a process and discipline-based.
Still, our experience with colleagues tells us that teachers continue
to look for new strategies to engage student writers and boost
their own teaching effectiveness. We've put together a list of
practices that are doable and "no-tech," yet each has
the potential to transform the ways you assign, discuss, and comment
on student work.
1. Give writing assignments in written form, not just word of
mouth.
Your student will be able to carry away your actual words about
the assignment, not just a vague memory of them, and when she
wonders at 1 a.m. what she's really supposed to do, she'll refer
to your handout. For many students, puzzling over an assignment
sheet becomes the first step in doing the writing. And for you,
the act of writing down the assignment will help clarify its connection
to your course goals.
2. During classroom discussions of student writing, hand out
copies of the writing being discussed.
You want students to talk about both what has been said in the
writing, and how. Both require students to discuss the written
text, not their personal recall of hearing it read aloud by the
writer. It is impossible to have a discussion of writing at the
sentence level, where much of the crucial action takes place,
without having the written text to refer to. Also, the presence
of the physical text reminds students that you're asking them
to work with the writing, not work on the student who wrote it.
3. Insist on a classroom with seminar-style seating or moveable
desks, so that teacher and students can face each other in discussions.
By giving feedback to another writer, guided by a more experienced
writer (the teacher), students learn to recognize and talk helpfully
about a text's various qualities. Over time, students gradually
internalize these discussions; they learn how to put into words
their own use of written language. It is this that will leave
them with a greater feeling of control over their future writing.
4. Get your students to write weekly in some form, whether it's
a draft, informal response, or free write.
Habits are powerful things, and the ability to generate written
text at will is crucial. Weekly practice in small doses flexes
a student's writing muscles regularly and gives her more material
(e.g., her own concerns about the course material) when it comes
time to draft an essay. As Courtney, a first-year writing student,
once remarked, "By having us write short assignments every
week, it made the research paper less scary when it came time
to do it."
5. In class, write when your students are writing.
You are what you teach. If you want your students to write, be
a writer in a way visible to them. Embody the writing way of life.
If, for example, you ask students during a charged dialogue to
pause and reflect in writing for 10 minutes, your joining them
displays a commitment to writing as a way to struggle deeply with
hard questions.
6. Only grade finished products, not drafts or informal writing.
Drafts and informal writing are, by definition, not completed
work. The whole point of assigning them is to move students away
from trying to write the finished product on the first try. The
act of grading a draft, response paper, or journal entry sends
a contradictory message by implying that it can be judged by standards
applicable to completed work. The power of making room in the
course for process will be lost if students believe that their
"draft" should look finished.
7. Give students' writing back within 1 week. Adjust level of
feedback to time available.
Work returned soon with a little feedback, from the teacher or
from a structured peer review, beats work returned later with
a lot of feedback. A teacher's few sentences penciled on a student's
informal response paper or another student's questions jotted
on his classmate's draft will prompt more thinking and writing.
Timing matters: The student needs to feel he is in a live exchange
of ideas.
8. The first time you read a batch of student work, do so without
a pencil in hand. Just read to get a sense of it; make no comments.
Second time, read closely and make comments.
This method makes use of the power of your mind to process what
you've read in its own quiet way. If you read the first time simply
as a reader, not as a commentator or editor, then let the reading
sink in, you can arrive at a basic idea of what your student is
up to with surprisingly little effort. By the time you return
to the stack, your brain will have invisibly processed, for example,
that one student has sorted out the chronology of her ideas while
most of the class still grapples with ordering their paragraphs.
(Skeptical? Try this once; it works.)
9. On each piece of writing you respond to, make at least 1 mark
per page. Easiest technique is to underline what's promising,
worth pursuing, well said.
This is the basic practical way of creating a feeling of ongoing
dialogue between writer and reader. Never underestimate the power
of a student's knowing that you are paying attention to him. Underlining
promising things is quick and communicative; it becomes a way
of cultivating your own perception of the student's potential,
as well as guiding and encouraging the student to become aware
of it. And don't forget to tell your students what the underlines,
and your other marks, mean.
10. Retire the red pen; stop copy-editing your students' work.
Point out no more than 2 patterns of error, and leave it to the
student to find a way to resolve the errors.
When you copy-edit a student's work, many students will look
at the marked-up copy and think "Oh, that's been taken care
of for me." Rather than encouraging learning, it sends the
message that correcting those things is the teacher's job. If
a student can see that she regularly makes errors of a certain
type, based on a misunderstanding of the underlying principle,
and then correct that misunderstanding, lasting learning could
take place.
11. Commenting on the first draft of a full-fledged paper is
your best opportunity to bring about learning. On the draft, make
no more than 3 major suggestions.
Only the strongest students -- who are likely to be the best
writers already -- will read the commentary on a graded paper,
extract general principles from the comments, and carry them over
to their next writing assignment. The others will simply zero
in on the grade. However, when your comments on a first draft
go back to a student who knows she will be writing a second version,
those comments stand the best chance of being applied. As for
limiting your suggestions, both you and the student will benefit
if you make your task, and subsequently the student's, more manageable.
Here are some aspects of a student's work you might consider
when responding to it:
* assignment (degree of completion);
* form (appropriateness for assignment);
* focus (the paper's main idea, thesis, guiding question);
* organization (order of paragraphs, central idea of each paragraph);
* evidence (data, examples, quotations, illustrations, personal
experience);
* language (appropriate to the topic, assignment, discipline);
* discussion (establishing connections between focus, evidence,
and writer's own ideas);
* gaps (missing evidence, discussion, connection);
* sources (selection of relevant ones, presentation in formal
style);
* the writer's personal voice; and
* other aspects relevant to your discipline.
For more discussion about commenting on student drafts and resources
on using writing in your teaching go to http://my.simmons.edu/academics/asc/wac/teachingwriting/
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