Title: Our Focus: Inquiry
1Our Focus Inquiry
- How can writing tools enable writing program
administrators and teachers in a large university
writing program to construct a shared,
standardized curriculum? - CrowdSourcing gt Will a collaboratively
constructed curriculum be wiser than a curriculum
that a WPA or faculty committee could construct?
- Tools
- SharePoint,
- Blackboard
- Camtasia
- Discussion forums
- Blogs
- Wikis
2Context
- 9500 students enroll in about 450 sections of ENC
1101 or ENC 1102. - 50 graduate students, 30 adjuncts, and 8
Instructors. - The majority of our M.A. and Ph.D. GTAS seek
degrees in literature or creative writing as
opposed to Rhetoric and Composition.
3Technological Dramas, CrowdSourcing, and the
Wisdom of Teachers
- Joe Moxley
- University of South Florida
- http//joemoxley.org
4Embracing Contraries gt Two Contrary Goals
- Standardize the curriculum (within reason)
- Engage CrowdSourcing gt the Wisdom of Teachers
- Create an online environment that provides agency
to teachers, agency that they have never had
before because the collaborative technologies
were previously unavailable.
5On the Need for Standardization
- "Sure," I would reply, sitting down at a
conference table with the teaching faculty.
"Tell me what is being taught in your courses."
This would be met with an embarrassed silence.
Most of the time nobody really knew what was
taught in the various sections of the various
writing courses listed in the college catalogue
-- that is, in any course besides the one a
particular teacher was teaching, with the door to
the classroom shut ..Can we imagine a
mathematics department in which Math 101 has
widely different goals depending on which teacher
happens to be teaching it, with some working on
beginning arithmetic while others are starting
calculus?" (White, Edward p.4).
White, E. (2005). Why Outcomes? The Origins of
the Outcomes Statement. In The Outcomes Book
Debate and Consensus after the WPA Statement.
Logan Utah State UP.
6On The Wisdom of Crowds, Decentralized Systems
- if you set a crowd of self-interested,
independent people to work in a decentralized way
on the same problem, instead of trying to direct
their efforts from the top down, their collective
solution is likely to be better than any other
solution you could come up (70) - Surowiecki, J. (2004). The Wisdom of Crowds. New
York Anchor Books.
7Smart vs Dumb Crowds
a decentralized system can only produce
genuinely intelligent results if there is a means
of aggregating information of everyone in the
system (74)
Aggregationwhich could be seen as a curious form
of centralizationis therefore paradoxically
important to the success of decentralization (75)
8Managing Contraries, Generating Synergy
Decentralized Systems Centrifugal Motion
Centralized systemsCentripetal Motion
9Our Effort _at_ Standardization
- Same textbooks
- 3 major projects revised 3xs (choose from
alternatives or submit new alternative) - Written feedback by teachers x 3
- Blackboard for grading throughout semester
- 3 Blogs or Wikis or Journals x250 words /weekx
13 12000 words - Use of our Evaluation Form once for each Project
- 2 Conferences/semester
- ePortfolio/wikifolio
10Aggregating Knowledge Online
- Aggregate Knowledge _at_ Our Websites
- F2F Meetings
- Camtasia Videos
- Podcasts More
- Websites
- Honor the creative power of the individual
teacher - Create systems for contributing
- Create diverse opportunities for different ways
to contribute and be part of the community
11Aggregating Knowledge
- http//collegewriting.us to serve as the primary
website for the program. - http//writingwiki.org to provide an open access,
password free space for student writing. - http//teachingwiki.org to provide an open
access, password free space for teachers to
brainstorm about teaching practices and program
policies. - http//writingblogs.org to enable students to
blog as required by our curriculum.
12WritingBlogs.Org
13Outcomes
- Some success with collaboration
- Different Reactions to Technologies
- Different Roles for Teachers
14Successes and Opportunities
- Approximately 40 faculty have created websites
that connect with our curriculum or adapt our
curriculum. - About 20 have developed major writing projects or
minor assignments and had these curriculum
materials reviewed and approved by our Policy
Committee.
15TeachingWiki.Org
- Many of our teachers have used the wiki to share
ideas on useful blog topics, http//teachingwiki.o
rg/default.aspx/TeachingWiki/Blogging20Topics.htm
l. - Approximately 15 teachers collaborate on an essay
on teaching the writing process at
http//teachingwiki.org/default.aspx/TeachingWiki/
TeachingWritingProcess.html - 20 teachers share abstracts on essays related to
teaching at http//teachingwiki.org/default.aspx/T
eachingWiki/TeachingWritingAnnotatedBibliography.h
tml - About 25 teachers share lessons plans for 1101 at
http//teachingwiki.org/default.aspx/TeachingWiki/
1101.html and 1102 at http//teachingwiki.org/defa
ult.aspx/TeachingWiki/1102.html
16WritingWiki.Org
- Darcy Webber has had repeated sections of her
composition courses develop a website on public
writing that has come to inform the work of all
of our teachers http//writingwiki.org/default.
aspx/WritingWiki/PublicWritingOnline.html - Quentin Vierrege has his students work weekly on
collaborative wiki-novels http//writingwiki.org
/default.aspx/WritingWiki/WikiNovelMWF.html - Taylor Mitchell had her students research
university communities through t-shirts. Her
students posted pictures of t-shirts around
campus and explained how they show community
http//www.writingwiki.org/default.aspx/WritingWik
i/ResearchingUniversityCommunityTShirts.html - http//writingwiki.org/default.aspx/WritingWiki/Cl
ass20Wiki20Workspaces.html.
17WritingWiki.Org
- John Janzen and Brian McAllister's students
created an online lexical dictionary to build
vocabulary http//www.writingwiki.org/default.as
px/WritingWiki/LexicalDictionary.html - Ryan Meehan's students create wiki workspaces to
do their class work, including peer review.
http//writingwiki.org/default.aspx/WritingWiki/Cl
ass20Wiki20Workspaces.html - A number of us have used wikifolios as an
alternative to eportfolios via Blackboard. Here
is an example of one students wikifolio
http//writingwiki.org/default.aspx/1102/MariaFran
coWaite.html. And here is an example of
student-generated links to wikifolios
18Successes and Opportunities
- Resistance on many fronts has given way to
advocacy. What was once mysterious and troubling
has now become transparent, prosaic, and useful.
- Power has been distributed more equitably.
- A few faculty members have been genuinely
inspired by our use of technology.
19Successes and Opportunities
- By being early adopters, we were able to move
most of our courses into hybrid classrooms, which
enables our teachers to use the Internet and
document cameras to feature studied work. - Success Breeds Success
20Assumed Roles of Participating Faculty in the
Online FYC Community
- In 1995, Everett Rogers presented five adopter
categories that have since gained widespread
usage - Innovators
- early adopters
- early majority
- late majority
- laggards.
21Administrators
- The administrator category consists of the staff
of the writing program, which includes the
writing program director, the associate director,
and the program assistants. These users
routinely create new document libraries, web
parts, and web pages. They also work with
teachers who do not wish to learn the technology
to upload the content they provide.
22Downloaders
- Rather than adapt the content of the websites to
suit their unique interests, these users - point their students to the program websites and
tell their students to follow the directions - do not like significant changes to the websites
- prefer that the websites be written for students
as opposed to teachers
23Authors
- Authors play a leadership role in the writing
program by - uploading new projects, by
- uploading new writing assignments, and
- engaging their students in online authoring
projects. - Authors may also include teachers who develop new
projects yet rely on administrators to upload
them.
24Critics
- These users critique the curriculum/polices via
online discussions, blogs, committee work, and
written responses that they share with peers and
program administrators. - These users know how to use the technologies but
they may not use the technology to upload
content - While they may refuse to provide projects or
alternative or revised policies, they do provide
meaningful critiques that shape the program and
redirects it.
25Adapters
- These users download selected content from the
website. They then revise the assignments to fit
their needs and interests. Then they submit
their revisions to their students or they upload
the texts to their own websites. They may not
evolve into authors - The percentage of users who are Adapters appears
to grow each year as our faculty become more
comfortable with online writing.
26Tourists
- These users visit the website on occasion, and
they direct their students to follow the
instructions on limited parts of the website. In
other words, they pick and choose, using some
assignments and ignoring others. As tourists
these users occasionally violate local
conventions.
27Advocates
- These kind souls share their use of the websites
with other teachers in the program. They help
focus the Tourists and transform the Lost and
Confused (see below) into Adopters, Critics, or
Authors. These folks are vocal on the listserv
they are eager to help, to mentor. Along with the
Authors and Critics, these - are the opinion leaders in
- our community.
28Pretenders
- On the first day of class and during the first
few weeks, these users may distribute documents
to their students and writing program
administrators that suggest they plan to follow
standardized curriculum however, somewhere along
the road from week 1 to week 15 these users go
astray. They may substitute a sound,
challenging, thought provoking curriculum or they
may waste everyone's time.
29Explorers
- Perhaps most interesting, we have a few teachers
who have researched alternative and in some way
superior technologies to those that we host on
our servers. Ryan Meehan and John Nieves, for
example, have left our servers to set up shop at
http//usfcomposition.wikispaces.com/. At
WikiSpaces and other public writing spaces,
particularly Newsvine, they have students suggest
research ideas or organize peer reviews. Like
the Critics, these users help us see what
additional tools and policies we should use.
30Exciting New Possibilities
31Lost and Confused
- While rare, a small number of our teachers lack
very basic technology skills. For example, these
teachers do not know what to do when they are
asked to open Internet Explorer and click on
Project Three. While these users may be
supportive of the online curriculum, they may be
unable to navigate the Web or use the resources
in the hybrid classroom. They know there is an
Internet but they don't know where it is or how
to use it.
32Terrorists
- As you can imagine, this adopter category refers
to hackers who attack the website in order to
disable it or destroy it. In addition, as
presently constructed, all of the users in a
composition community have the ability to delete
the work of others. On occasion, either by error
or by choice, pages have been deleted, Web
resources and Web parts have been deleted, and
content has been rearranged - in ways that are confusing.
33Disconnected
- The Disconnected may not use the website because
they - may disagree with the curriculum or program
policies - may simply not be paying attention.
- may lack technology skills
- may lack interest in teaching.
- While in the early stages of our effort we had a
number of disconnected users, over time most of
these teachers have left the program to teach
elsewhere. A few remain, yet they are helped by
the Advocates and Administrators so they can
participate in our community from an offline
perspective.
34Roles of Teachers
- The notion that technology can enable teachers to
work collaboratively to develop a standardized
curriculum that is wiser than the curriculum an
individual writing program administrator could
develop -- represents a radically different role
for writing teachers and WPAs.
35Agency in English Departments???????????
- However, the dominant discourses do not come
from English departments, not by any stretch of
the most fertile imagination. They come from
commercial software vendors, centers for academic
computing, science and technology disciplines,
and institutionalized computer literacy
initiatives that concentrate on the workings of
software programs and hardware devices. By and
large, the dominant discourses can be
characterized as well intentioned but not
particularly critical, especially when it comes
to the facts and implications of design cultures
(Selber 178).
36Exciting New Possibilities
- Involve students as authors
- Research agency in relation to structure
understand tool use. . . - Build Tools gt Next Step SPS 2007
37Resources
- James Surowieki, Independent Individuals and Wise
Crowds, http//www.itconversations.com/shows/detai
l468.html - http//collegewriting.us
- http//writingwiki.org
- http//teachingwiki.org
- http//writingblogs.org