why johnny still can’t read or write

I meant to publish this entry a long time ago, but life intervened.

Way back in March of this year, Mark Bauerlein took aim at rhetoric and composition specialists by mocking the titles of a few of the panels and papers at the 2006 meeting of CCCC. Many, many commenters, myself included, called him on the logical problems with his assertions about the general tenor of rhet/comp scholarship. What’s at stake in the conversation is not only the issue of how we teach students to write (about which more below), but also what kind of standards we should expect from academics who blog. Typically if you want to take part in a scholarly conversation about a topic–whether through print in a journal, through speaking at a conference, or through online participation in a listserv–one of the qualifying steps is that you familiarize yourself with what has already been said in that conversation. You cannot merely pick up on the titles of a handful of things and then generalize about an entire field of study. To do so is to violate basic standards of academic discourse, and in any of those venues–journal, conference, or listserv–you would be called on it if you did so. I’ll go even further: if you were to commit this error in an assignment for a first-year writing course–of which the blog entry in question is highly critical–you would probably fail that assignment. Imagine, for example, a response to a collection of essays in which the student only discussed the essays’ titles.

Academia and academic blogs need more pointed disagreements over professional and disciplinary issues because, as I tell my students, disagreements sharpen arguments and they force participants to develop more fully the logic behind their positions. Bauerlein made much the same point about academia in general in a widely linked essay (titled “Liberal Groupthink Is Anti-Intellectual”) in the Chronicle of Higher Education awhile ago. However, we should expect a certain level of civility and respect in these disagreements. I’m not arguing that we should treat blogs so seriously that they become undifferentiated from other forms of professional communication; the playfulness that characterizes much academic blogging and the intersection of the private with the professional are unique and valuable characteristics that should not be lost. However, when academics blog about disciplinary questions, they should not throw out the window their ability–their responsibility–to bring the same intellectual rigor to the subject in a blog that they would if they were communicating through more traditional means. Bauerlein is an eloquent and persuasive speaker and writer. What would the conversation that ensued at the Valve have looked like if he had used that eloquence and persuasion in his original blog entry?

I’d like to add two short comments to the (now expired, I realize) conversation, one about what happens before students enter the composition classroom, and one about what happens afterwards.

College professors have no control over what students do or do not learn before they come to college. Upon graduation from high school, students should at minimum be functionally literate and know how to write a coherent paragraph. If they enter college without these skills, then they will only experience minimal improvement as writers and readers over the next four years. One or two courses in composition are not going to make up for what they didn’t learn in their previous twelve years of education. Those who are upset because they believe that college graduates lack essential basic skills should focus their attention on what happens before those students ever enter college, in the years when those basic skills should have been acquired.

Additionally, college professors have no control over what students do after they finish a college course. It’s entirely possible for students to learn a skill and then let that skill atrophy. In their composition courses, they should learn fairly advanced writing skills that will allow them to fulfill the assignments they encounter in a wide variety of subsequent courses. If those other courses–in history, in economics, in physics–are not challenging them in their reading and writing, then students are likely to lose whatever they may have gained in their first-year writing courses. In other words, while it is the responsibility of first-year writing courses to teach skillful reading and writing, it is every discipline’s responsibility to continue to require students to flex those reading and writing muscles. To the extent that it exists, the failure to graduate students with basic reading and writing skills is every discipline’s failure. It makes no sense to single out compositionists for blame.

We could have a very interesting and productive blog-based conversation about reading and writing skills and the college classroom, but that conversation will not be initiated by snarky drive-by comments that make fun of the annual meeting of this or that professional organization.

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focus on improvement

I first taught college students in the fall of 1993. I’m still working on getting better. Below are the areas that seem most important right now. Your comments and suggestions are most welcome.

  1. Student maturity and intellectual ability: First-year writing courses are filled with young people who are not only working on learning how to write at the university level. They’re also learning how to be college students, how to leave behind their high school coping mechanisms. This requires calling them on their immature classroom behavior when it happens but doing so in a way that doesn’t leave them feeling humiliated. This also requires professors to be patient and not take personally expressions of boredom and exhaustion. Many first-year students will feel like they’re in over their heads. Some of them will be right. There’s only so much their instructors can do to help them stay above water, but it’s hard to let go when you’re supposed to. [Props to Cats and Dogma for making a comment in this thread that sparked these thoughts.]
  2. Forging lasting relationships: I’ve chosen a teaching-intensive career path, but that doesn’t mean all I do with students is teach and grade papers. I’d like to help them become the people they want to be, to help them figure out who they want to be. With any luck, I’ll see my first-year, first-semester students again, perhaps in my writing courses next semester, perhaps in upper division literature courses. I also plan to embrace community service opportunities that are designed to bridge the gap between the campus and the town. In my utopian vision, some students will see me as a mentor. It’s difficult, though, to balance the part of the relationship focused on encouragement and friendly guidance with the part that involves evaluation of classwork. And in practical terms, I’d like to see students come to my office hours more frequently.
  3. Time management and organization 1: Teaching, service, and research require a great deal of time completing many heterogeneous tasks. My goals in this area are two-fold. First, I’m in search of the perfect system (preferably electronic and syncable across devices) for managing all the information that’s on my plate at any given time: writing projects, appointments, contacts, unanswered emails and phone calls, course prep, grades, attendance, service projects, letters of rec., etc. I’m currently using Apple’s iCal, Address Book, the U’s web interface for mail, and a txt file to keep track of everything, but this is not good enough because the programs don’t communicate with each other seamlessly. I need something that will automatically remind me when to get things done. I need something that groups tasks, contacts, and appointments into one project. My campus runs a Microsoft Exchange server, and I’m looking at using Entourage to sync with the server and, I hope, with my Palm. (By the way, does anyone know of software that syncs with Palm for managing attendance and grades?) I could really use some specific feedback from geeky academics who have found some success with establishing a workable system, and I could use pointers to tutorials that can help me do what I want to do.
  4. Time management and organization 2: Second, I need to discipline myself in only taking the right amount of time to prep a class or grade a paper. These are chunks of time in which I tend to let myself go on and on and on, burning up time that could be used getting other things done. This is not so much a procrastination problem as it is an efficiency problem. I think the (10+2)*5 hack will be helpful here1 as well as the Meditation Timer. Excessive prep does not equal better teaching. Excessive commenting does not equal more helpful feedback on student writing. How do I find the perfect medium?
  5. Knowing that I know what I’m doing: In general, I want to have a more relaxed attitude to my job. I’m too tense, and I think this contributes to my current sleep problems. It’s hard to remember that not only do I know what I’m doing, but I’m actually pretty darn good most of the time.

  1. I’ve tried this hack exactly once, but I was immediately interrupted by the smell of burning plastic coming from my laptop’s power adaptor, which had chosen that moment to short and flameout. I never went back to the hack. Now I have a new adaptor, so I’m ready to try it again. Actually — heh heh — I have a new, work-supplied 15″ MacBook Pro, but that’s a whole ‘nother post.
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rbopbg*

  1. Teaching Carnival # 12 will be hosted at Scrivenings one week from today.
  2. If I can manage to get some sleep, I’m going to write something (or a few somethings) about things like queer identity and the college campus. Interesting stuff is bouncing around in my head, but for some reason I have been waking up at 4:00 a.m. every morning, and I’m really, really tired all the time.
  3. That said, tonight I’m going to see The Heist and the Accomplice (The Cypress Knees and Coma Cinema are opening). All sorts of hub-bubbery is sure to take place.
  4. Remember before when I said that I was going to stay single for awhile unless “I meet someone who knocks me over with her wit, charm, and beauty”? I ended up feeling badly about writing that. What if someone I’ve met reads my blog and thinks, “He must not feel I’m witty, charming, or beautiful enough.” Au contraire! Let me clarify my thinking a bit: since I’ve been here I’ve met plenty of very attractive women of all ages. However, I think it’s probably a good idea to give myself some time to get my head on straight. I was in a relationship for 14 years, and I worry that I’ll just screw things up if I try to get involved again too soon. But I make a habit of never saying never.

*Random bullets of pure blogging gold.

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teaching carnival #11

Dat was easy

Welcome, fearless reader, to the 11th installment of the Teaching Carnival!

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Strip borrowed from Pearls Before Swine

How were you taught to teach?

A description of “Preparation for teaching” appears at Not of General Interest. At Reassigned Time, an explanation of “Teaching As a Job – What I Wish I’d Learned in Grad School.” And A White Bear describes “Learning to teach.”

What are you doing differently than you used to?

Some reflections On Teaching are offered at In Favor of Thinking. Marcia Hansen finds herself “Getting real.” Dr. m(mmm) is “trying a radical shift in my pedagogy, for one big course,” while Undine considers changing teaching practices. Hilaire describes “personality change … accomplished through teaching.”

Teaching and technology

Carrie Shanafelt is trying out a Wiki for her British Literature class to facilitate the sharing of student work. She hopes that “[t]he creation of a wiki…would render these [assigned historical context] memos in an attractive, interconnected, easily browsable format that would ensure that they don’t get lost or forgotten in the bottoms of bookbags”.

Originally posted on the Humanist listserv, Alan Liu’s proposed policy for appropriate student use of Wikipedia generated significant online buzz, both on that listserv (1, 2, 3) and at Kairosnews, one of Jonathan Goodwin’s class blogs, cac.ophony.org, and the CHE‘s Wired Campus Blog.

Metaspencer explains the answer to “Why course websites?

At Academic Commons, Susan Sipple discusses Digitized Audio Commentary in First Year Writing Classes, and Derek Mueller has tried commenting with audio in some online courses. At the Rhetorical Situation, Oxymoron finds online students more willing to engage in discussion than in-class students usually are.

Classroom Blogging: The Pedagogy and The Technology” is the first in a planned series of posts at AcademHack on using blogs in teaching. David Silver is requiring students to blog for the first time. Scot Barnett wonders if blogging can be taught. “Thoughts on blogs and textbooks” are offered by RevisionSpiral.

Chuck Tryon is teaching New Media Studies in the freshman composition class.

Relationships & Boundaries

There are several good entries about how students and professors interact. Professing Mama asks, “What’s Your Name, Little Girl, What’s Your Name?” Brightstar finds herself Concerned about Boundaries. Parts-n-Pieces addresses “faculty perception of students: as adults or as kids,” and finds that sometimes students need help making the transition to adulthood. Dr. Free-Ride wonders what her students should call her, and PZ Myers thinks that’s a good question. Ancarett also weighs in on the conversation.

Coincident with a New York Times article on Cathy Small Bardiac discusses her (no longer) pseudonymously authored My Freshman Year: What a Professor Learned by Becoming a Student. Dr. Crazy then responds. (See also this September 2005 entry by Steven Krause and this one from last February at the Salt Box, which provides some links to other discussions as well.)

Various…

Geeky Mom asks the big question: “What is education?.” Jason Jones explains that he will be “teaching in the pilot of [his] campus’s Learning in Communities program.” Ryan Claycomb reflects on “Dressing for Class.” Chuck Tryon describes “Teaching the Intro to Film Course.” Scrivener finds that being a beginning student of guitar provides him with insight into his students’ experience in the classroom and argues that “It’s Good To Be a Student.” Anne Galloway will be teaching Introduction to Sociology of Science & Technology” for the third time and is finding the right right rhythm. New Kid on the Hallway addresses student motivation, and StyleyGeek evaluates her students’ evaluations of her.

First day (or first week) back at teaching

Many bloggers recorded their impressions of the start of the semester:

But wait, there’s more!

Flavia is “Teaching the longer, larger class” and solicits advice on strategies.

Lanette Cadle addresses Theory, Pedagogy, and Lore in Composition Studies. Mike Edwards offers up a three-part series on teaching composition at West Point: I, II, III. Adjunct Kait explains “How to Write a Syllabus” in four easy lessons–I,
II,
III,
IV–to which the Grading Policy at Planned Obsolescence would make a nice addendum.

Ryan Claycomb wonders if he should be teaching his graduate seminar by or on the seat of his pants. Jeff Rice has been reading Wayne Booth’s The Vocation of a Teacher. Kristine Steenbergh finds herself reading and thinking about “Teaching Literature.” Coturnix discusses the “Scientist Rock Star!” idea in two parts: I, II. GrumpyABDadjunct has “a question and some musing.” Maggiemay describes her “[c]hallenges in advising” at Professorial Confessions. Half An Acre addresses academic jargon and student writing. A request for input on “in-class speaking exercises” is made at the Thinkery.

And finally, Timothy Burke tackles the issue of Assessment.

Peese Drive home safely

That’s all, folks! There’s more backstage on del.icio.us and Technorati, so visit those sites, and consider adding their rss feeds to your subscriptions. Please tune in to Scrivenings on September 15 for Teaching Carnival #12, and be sure to check out our lineup for the fall.

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syllabus question

Let’s say you’re a student. If it was Monday, and your syllabus said this…

Monday, August 28

In Class…

  • Discussion of Chapter 2
  • Discussion of university website
  • Discussion of journal entries on why you’ve decided to go to college

For today…

  • Read Chapter 2
  • View and analyzie the university website
  • Write in your journal about why you’ve decided to go to college

…would you assume that “For today…” meant things you were supposed to have completed by Wednesday’s class?

Is there some way that this information should be conveyed more clearly?

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