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- Comments: Gated by NETNEWS@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU
- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!auvm!UNB.CA!HUNT
- Message-ID: <ID1554.D921226.T175102.HUNT@UNB.CA>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.mbu-l
- Date: Sat, 26 Dec 1992 17:51:02 AST
- Sender: "Megabyte University (Computers & Writing)" <MBU-L@TTUVM1.BITNET>
- Comments: <26DEC92.16558991.0035.MUSIC@UNB.CA>
- From: Russ Hunt <HUNT@UNB.CA>
- Subject: uniformity, real audiences, & evaluation
- Lines: 146
-
- I had been away for a few days before Christmas and there
- was a flood of interesting stuff on MBU while I was gone. There
- were a few items which seemed to invite responses from me. Let
- me try to do them all in one swell foop, as my father used to
- say. This may be a bit long, but remember, it's just one
- posting, and it might well have been four or five . . .
- I read most of the last few days of MBU on our netnews
- server so I can't tell who MLB14@PSUVM is, but she/he commented,
- in response to my suggestion about "having the authors know
- something about their topics that their audience doesn't
- know--and . . . creating those opportunities by avoiding common
- texts and assignments," that "That'd never fly here" because "the
- administration at my school is concerned that all sections of our
- writing classes have roughly equivalent experiences and
- assignments." The question boiled down to "How is it possible to
- maintain a situation where students write for real audiences and
- purposes and still maintain a fairly homogeneous writing
- curriculum?"
- There was quite a lot of discussion about the advisability
- of "a fairly homogeneous writing curriculum" following this, but
- I don't want to take that up: I want to address a different
- issue.
- I would suggest that to ask students to write to each other
- about something they've read that others need to know about (and
- don't: for instance, describing how the novel they've chosen to
- read, and which others haven't read, sounds and feels, and trying
- to persuade others to read it) not only creates "a situation
- where students write for real audiences and purposes," but also
- avoids common texts -- and certainly wouldn't preclude various
- classes having "roughly equivalent experiences and assignments."
- Especially if those who read the papers were the rest of the
- class, and if the result was that the rest of the class actually
- decided whether or not to read the recommended work. And even
- more, if the teacher not only didn't mark it, but didn't (as far
- as the author(s) are aware) even read it.
- Irv Peckham commented that "we have to be careful that the
- issues and texts that we have them discuss and read have to be
- close to their worlds. We can stretch them, surely. But we have
- to be expert in knowing how much. And we have to remember their
- differences and that we are responsible for teaching the whole
- class." I seem usually to agree with Irv, but here I want to be
- cautious. It strikes me that the most likely error to be
- committed by the sort of person on MBU (certainly by me) is to
- be excessively cautious, to "teach down" and not to stretch, to
- underestimate what people can be brought to be interested in.
- The trick, it seems to me, is to find ways in which students can
- stretch _each other_ dialogically.
- Hers's an example. Suppose the recommendation of a novel
- was fit into a situation where the first thing that happened was
- that others in the class read it and asked (in writing) questions
- whose answers they thought would help them decide what to read,
- and the questions were passed back to the recommender, who was
- invited to answer them? And _then_ people read all the new,
- augmented recommendations, and decided individually which books
- they would most like to read? And had to say why (in writing)?
- And the reasons were "published" for the class, along with the
- list of five or six books that everyone had to choose one of (a
- list set up to include at least one book picked by everyone in
- class)?
- That's what I'm currently doing with my first year class.
- Over Christmas, they'll be reading one of a list of books created
- and chosen that way. It seems to me that they've already
- stretched each other rather a lot, and will do so more as the
- list of books narrows down.
- What I'm really interested in here, however, is the way they
- invent a language for this new discourse task (they've never done
- anything like this in their lives). It's the invention/discovery
- of the genre that I'm mainly concerned with. This kind of
- learning, I believe, makes it more likely that they'll be able to
- learn the language of academic discourse as and when they get
- engaged in that in the same way.
- I could go on, but I don't want to drive folks away by
- riding my hobbyhorse. I'll change the subject slightly. Rhoda
- Carroll asked Irv, after he agreed with me that it's a bad idea
- to put grades on papers, "OK Irv, I'll bite: if you don't put
- grades on your students' papers, what do you put in the box
- labeled "grade" that your registrar gives you to fill out at the
- end of each semester?"
- In response, I want to raise some questions here: how sure
- is any of us that the grade on a completed piece of writing is an
- accurate prediction of what a student might do on a future piece
- of writing in a different (probably radically different)
- situation? Why should a grade in a course be determined by
- grades on "papers"? And how many of us believe that there's any
- reason to doubt the studies which have demonstrated the
- unreliability of grades on papers themselves? I'd like to see
- a description of how Irv "gets away" without grades, but in the
- meantime let me say that in my experience there are two possible
- answers to Rhoda's question, one obvious and one not so. The
- obvious one is writing portfolios. The less obvious one is what
- some of us do here at St. Thomas: we establish a minimum grade by
- counting up instances of sheer participation, and raise that
- grade by asking students to complete what we call "colleague
- acknowledgements," whereby students evaluate the contributions of
- others in the class to their learning. Students who are rated
- highly have their grades raised proportionately above the minima.
- The instructor may specify that she/he might intervene to raise
- an individual mark (I do, but I've never had to do it).
- I have to say, too, that I'm not so sure about Peg
- Syverson's suggestion about specifying genres. I'd rather
- specify _situations_ and let the situation shape the genre
- (that's how the real world works). If you're in a traditional
- classroom situation, there's a genre that's appropriate (a very
- peculiar genre, one which is useful only in that situation), and
- when we specify a different one we ask students to do what even
- professionals find difficult. I think we need to change the
- situation, instead.
- Let me finish this overlong post by agreeing fervently with
- Irv that "They don't have to all be reading the same thing. It
- does work best with some of these kinds of writing if they work
- in groups, though, where they can share information, ideas,
- drafts, etc." And, in a later post, "The tutorial fosters a
- dependency on the good ol' teacher--lot of ideological
- implications there, practical disadvantages as well. Go with
- groups. Let the teacher (as dominant instructor, telling writers
- how to write) fade away." I'm uneasy with Marcy Bauman's
- description of what she wants to say -- "Okay, Student, what were
- you trying to do here--right here, on line 35? I don't get it.
- Judging by your peers' comments, they thought X. Is that what
- you intended?" I'd suggest that students almost never hear what
- I'm saying in situations like that. The teacher always speaks
- through a megaphone. They hear me saying, "No, that's wrong."
- They hear me saying "C-." In situations where evaluation is
- central -- and where it exists, it's central -- they don't hear
- their peers' comments; they hear me. Why not let them hear and
- deal with the comments as we do in conversation (which is how we
- learn languages best)?
- And finally (finally!), even if our students could hear what
- we're saying in situations like that, how often can we possibly
- do it? Even with superhuman effort from us (the kind we're all
- used to, even those of us whose universities support weekly half-
- hour conferences with individual students) our students can't
- write and get responses often enough to be truly immersed in
- written discourse. If they write and read each others' work, in
- situations where it matters, they can write many times as much
- -- and get many times as much response.
- I'd like to chime in with all the wishes for everyone on MBU
- to have a restful, restorative holiday.
- -- Russ
- __|~_
- Russell A. Hunt __|~_)_ __)_|~_ Learning and Teaching
- Department of English )_ __)_|_)__ __) Development Office
- St. Thomas University | )____) | EMAIL: hunt@unb.ca
- Fredericton, New Brunswick___|____|____|____/ FAX: (506) 450-9615
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