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- Date: Sat, 26 Dec 1992 23:26:38 EST
- Sender: "Megabyte University (Computers & Writing)" <MBU-L@TTUVM1.BITNET>
- From: Bill Condon <USERLCBK@UMICHUM.BITNET>
- Subject: Standardizing Composition Classes
- Lines: 85
-
- David Schwalm's questions are good ones--tough, pragmatic, realistic
- questions that almost every WPA must face, particularly in universities that
- do not commit sufficient resources to writing programs. I look at those
- questions and I think about the curiously linked fates of David and of Liz
- Hamp-Lyons: both dealing with the same old rotten situation, each coming to
- an opposite conclusion about what to do personally in that situation. And
- for the life of me I can't say whether David's choice to stick it out and
- make the program *better* within the context of limited resources, a
- lit-centered department, etc, is in any way better or worse than Liz's
- choice to tell them to take the job and stuff it. All I *can* say is that
- here are two people for whom I have a great deal of respect, and I'm mad as
- hell that they have been placed under such contrained circumstances and
- forced to make a choice between doing SOME good, but thereby perpetuating
- the status quo, or depriving the program of their good influence, thereby
- telling the status quo that it's wrong, but leaving the rotten system in
- place. It's a Hobson's choice, and both these people deserve better.
-
- Back to the question of standardizing sections. No one, so far, has
- objected to the idea of making sure that different sections of the same
- course teach more or less the same objectives or use the same curriculum. I
- don't either. But I do object to the constraints getting any more specific
- than that. To me, a standard syllabus is imitatio gone too far, a kind of
- sanctioned pedagogical plagiarism. I understand the IMPULSE behind that
- syllabus, but having worked in several places that used them, I can say from
- personal experience that (1) they give teachers the wrong message, promoting
- teaching as if it were a product, not a process, and (2) they don't work,
- for a variety of reasons, ranging from the fact that the teacher who'd
- rather teach lit. will just go through the motions anyway to the situation I
- described in my earlier message--such a syllabus can deprive the dedicated,
- thinking teacher of her/his most effective teaching methods.
-
- I think the syllabus is not the point at which we can effectively establish
- quality control over comp. sections, and I offer a couple of suggestions
- that I hope begin to address David's questions.
-
- First, I think a comp program has to establish that continuing to teach
- comp. is not a right or a form of financial aid for those whose REAL goal is
- to teach lit. Continuing in a TEACHING assistantship ought to depend on the
- individual's effectiveness in the classroom--and that means effectiveness
- teaching writing. Until that happens, I don't see the situation David
- describes changing much. But the good news is that TAships are often in the
- control of the Comp Director, so maybe a change in attitude like that is
- possible in the short term.
-
- Second, SOME sort of collaborative grading is needed to give teachers in the
- program a reason to talk with each other seriously about standards, methods,
- assignments, etc. We do this with portfolios, but other methods will work
- as well. Portfolio reading groups meet several times during a grading
- period, the members visit each others' classes, they exchange copies of
- their writing assignments, and they talk with each other about the
- objectives those assignments are supposed to carry out. Later in the term,
- they meet with actual portfolios to develop scoring consistency within their
- reading group (we also meet as a whole faculty to do this, but then our
- faculty group numbers only 15-20). Mixing veteran faculty with new faculty,
- TA's, and adjuncts means that the Portfolio groups also serve important
- mentoring and faculty development functions too. New folks get close
- contact with vets, and vets are constantly exposed to new ideas and
- approaches. both groups benefit. And so does the curriculum, since any
- teacher who is seriously out of line in the kinds of assigments s/e is
- making finds it out quickly, and the inducement to change is powerful--the
- fate of their students in the exit assessment depends on those students'
- being able to produce writing that fulfills the group's sense of competence
- or excellence.
-
- Over the long haul, institutions must be convinced that writing programs are
- valuable, that composition courses are not just cash cows--nor are they
- courses that teach "what students should have learned in high school." We
- must make the point that we teach "college" writing--forms of academic
- writing that students can't learn in high school, even if they want to,
- forms that are crucial to their success in a college classroom.
-
- Over the long haul, we need to involve more of the tenure-track faculty in
- teaching writing to first-and second-year students (or maybe in teaching
- ANYTHING to first- and second-year students.
-
- There are probably other measures we need to take, but the hour is late and
- this message is already too long. Let me just end by saying that using a
- standard syllabus to solve the problems we have in our comp. programs is
- like using force to "solve" a diplomatic problem. It may work, but it
- represents a failure of creativity; it constitutes an admission that we
- can't really solve the problem reasonably, so we have to fall back on our
- power to control a situation, whether our position is right or wrong.
-
- Bill Condon
- University of Michigan
-