Title: WiD and AcLits at London Met
1WiD and AcLits at London Met
- Can Academic Literacies be taught?
-
- Queen Mary, University of London
- 12 June 2009
2Writing in the Disciplines
- Examine Write Now CETLs WiD work at London Met
- Discuss new project to make this work more
systematic, sustainable and effective - Consider relationship between AcLits and WiD
- Do they complement each other?
- Is WiD an effective vehicle for promoting
attention to AcLits? - Does WiD perhaps neglect the critical dimension
essential to AcLits thinking?
3Writing in the Disciplines
- Lecturers / Professors take responsibility for
students disciplinary writing within their
disciplinary courses (rather than leaving this to
stand-alone writing/study skills courses or
workshops often taught by others) - Writing specialists may collaborate with the
lecturer - For all students
- Not about remediality but about creating more
effective writers in the subject and about using
writing to create better thinking and better
disciplinary practice - Cf. AcLits on problems of student writing as a
result of confusions concerning disciplinary
demands and epistemologies (Lea and Street 1998) - Wingate (AcLits) real understanding of the
complexities of disciplinary writing can only be
achieved within the subject and through
explanations, modelling and feedback by subject
tutors (2006 463)
4WAC, WiD and Beyond
- Writing across the Curriculum attempt to use
writing outside composition classes and to
integrate it within all courses to promote
thinking and learning (Bean 2001). McLeod and
Maimon describe WAC as one of the most important
educational reform movements of the twentieth
century (2000 582). - Writing in the Disciplines focuses more
specifically on creating disciplinary writers
(including attention to the kinds of writing
students will do in their professional life).
Cf. Monroe (2002 and 2003). - (Communication across the Curriculum. See e.g.
http//www.uncg.edu/cac)
5WiD at London Met
- Write Now CETL many WiD collaborations
- Initial strategy work with the willing
- No master-plan at the start collaborations
depend on lecturers level of interest - Reflect on experiences and try to improve
- Major collaborations in first year of CETL with
Psychology, Film Studies, Management and
Multimedia. Other more minor collaborations.
6Lessons learned
- Limited point to delivering a writing workshop
or (worse) a lecture on writing. Unsustainable
lecturer doesnt always turn up gives wrong
message and despite best efforts divorces
writing from the subject. - Best role for writing specialist is to
collaborate with lecturer, offering support,
knowledge, resources, advice, energy and
encouragement and helping lecturer to assume
ownership of writing in their module. This is a
process, not something that will happen or be
perfected in one semester. Our job is in some
ways helping lecturers switch on to the
importance of writing. Doing more for the
lecturer in the short term can in the long run
mean doing less. - Once lecturers see writing as not a remedial or
surface-level issue (grammar and syntax) but as
the vehicle through which students perform the
higher order skills of their discipline
(analysing , synthesising, evaluating etc), they
are more likely to be interested in owning this
aspect of their teaching.
7Working with Design
- In the second year of the CETL, collaboration
with Design building upon first-year WiD
experience - Course leader redesigns compulsory first-year
Design History module in collaboration with
writing specialist to make it writing intensive - Writing workshop designed with advice of writing
specialist to facilitate understanding of the
first assignment (including how to use sources
and reference) - Resources produced to make this workshop
sustainable - Professional development all teaching staff
co-teach with either course leader or writing
specialist - The role of writing across the whole three years
of the course is considered in order to build on
first year developmentally - Research partnership, conference presentations,
book project on related subject. Professional
recognition.
8Goal for final year of CETL
- Build on our experience and create something
potentially lasting and sustainable - Put in place a model of WiD which will promote
good practice and which doesnt require huge
resources - Make pedagogical research an integral aspect of
WiD collaborations in order to raise the status
of teaching and learning issues - Put in place a model of WiD which encourages
ownership of writing by subject lecturers
9WiD and Assessment at MUOhio
- Timely visit by Paul Anderson, Howe Center for
Writing Excellence, Miami University, Ohio - Creates detailed writing assessment rubrics in
conjunction with MUOhio subject-based professors - Writing diagnostic takes place
- Target weak point and implement teaching change
- Writing diagnostic repeated
- More targeting
- On-going cycle of evaluation. Incremental
improvements. Long-term, sustainable,
developmental process rather than a quick fix. - Allows Paul Anderson to work with many different
disciplines at the same time
10Paul Andersons Cycle of Evaluation
11London Met WiD Research Project
- Implement a similar model of evaluation which
encourages staff to assume ownership of writing
and adopts an incremental, process-based approach - Build on earlier Assessment Plus work to focus on
specific aspects of writing (http//www.writenow.a
c.uk/assessmentplus/) - Create wide impact in final year of CETL
- Offer a sustainable model of writing /
professional development at London Met
12Step 1 expressions of interest
- Call for expressions of interest in academic
writing / pedagogical research project - The Write Now Centre for Excellence in Teaching
and Learning is looking for collaborators among
London Met academic staff for a writing-related
pedagogical research project for the academic
year 2009-10. -
- This project will endeavour to ascertain
strengths and weaknesses in student writing in
particular disciplines and to put into place
teaching provision targeted at specific writing
issues. The success of this intervention will
then be ascertained in a number of ways. - This project aims to lead to improved provision
for student writing and to put into place an
effective mechanism for diagnosing and improving
student written texts. - If you are interested, please email Dr Peter
ONeill (peter.oneill_at_londonmet.ac.uk) by Friday
May 1st, stating - Your subject
- The module which you would like to work with us
on - Typical number of students enrolled in the module
- Aspects of student writing which you think you
might be particularly interested in targeting
13Step 2 choose partners
- Expressions of interest received from 12
disciplines computing law food biotechnology
business aviation education sports therapy
international relations accounting PG cert
film studies accreditation of prior experiential
learning - 7 lecturers/module-based teams chosen, based
primarily on size of cohorts - Follow up letter to those selected, to provide
detailed information on the project and
expectations of participating, and asking them to
confirm whether they still wanted to work with us - Six replied in the affirmative. One did not reply
at all. Partners from education film studies
accounting accreditation of prior experiential
learning sports therapy business
14Step 3 preliminary meeting
- In June, we will meet with all participants to
- Clarify the project aims and stages
- Discuss expected outcomes
- Discuss the pedagogical action research framework
(Write Now Research Associates) - Provide simple forms for diagnosing student
writing based on previous Assessment Plus
research - Clarify the purpose and process of the initial
writing diagnosis
15Step 4 teaching inventory
- Before applying the writing diagnostic, all
partners will be asked to complete a
teaching/writing goals inventory - This will support research into effectiveness of
the model overall - Reflects fact we are as much interested in
investigating teacher change as writing
improvement
16Step 5 writing diagnostic
- Participants will apply writing diagnostic to a
sample of student work from this years module - The aim is to
- Break writing up into manageable targets for
improvement rather than to see it as an
amorphous, insoluble problem - Enable definition of what counts as writing which
is good, excellent, poor etc within the
particular discipline and teaching context - Gain an understanding of the aspects of writing
students are doing well and those they are doing
less well - The writing diagnostic will consist of rating
students written work according to specified
assessment criteria and identifying extracts of
writing that demonstrate the criteria being met
at different standards of performance - The outcomes of this will provide a baseline
assessment which will then be used to help
determine the kind of writing intervention to be
developed for implementation next year
17Step 6 planning an intervention
- Early summer first one-to-one meeting between
CETL staff member and lecturer/team - Discuss outcomes of writing diagnostic
- Decide which aspect of writing will be targeted
- Brainstorm possible interventions of a
sustainable nature (n.b. possible implementation
in a blended learning environment) - Late summer second one-to-one meeting between
CETL staff member and lecturer - Discuss lecturers ideas for proposed
intervention - Email support available over summer
18Step 7 intervention
- Lecturer carries out intervention as part of
regular module teaching in autumn 2009 - Learning Technology support available if needed
- Informal support available from CETL staff
- Ongoing reflective log kept by participants
19Step 8 post-module evaluation
- Teaching/writing goals inventory completed again,
to attempt to understand teacher change and how
lecturer feels about assuming responsibility for
students writing development - Reapply writing diagnostic to new batch of
student writing - In part to assess possible writing improvement
- But also as part of long-term process of teacher
reflection on student writing and how it can be
improved
20Step 9 research and dissemination
- Production of case studies, final report,
presentations and publications - Research fund to support Write Now CETL Research
Associates - Evaluation of intervention (e.g., research
assistance to aid data collection and analysis) - Dissemination (e.g., conference attendance)
- Writing Development in Higher Education (WDHE)
conference, June 2010 panel presentation?
21Writing Centre
- A place where such work can be carried out and
recognised - Disciplinary peer tutorials (London Met Writing
Mentors Scheme) to support lecturers (2000
one-to-one tutorials 2006-09 with over 900 held
last year) - But staff development, learning development and
language centres could also be units for carrying
out WiD work?
22AcLits and WiD
- AcLits so far in large part a theoretical
approach. Cf. Lillis Academic Literacies has
been highly generative as a critical research
frame, challenging many common-sense assumptions
about what is involved in student writing and
foregrounding the limitations in much current
writing pedagogy. However, as a design frame it
has yet to be developed. I am using design here
in the broad sense of the application of research
findings and understandings to pedagogy (2006
33). - WiD perhaps is more pragmatic? Reflect on the
issue. Do something. Reflect and do it again
differently? Cf. Action Research. - Lillis suggests that the pedagogical outcome of
Academic Literacies is likely to be dialogues
between student-writers and tutor-readers which
enable participation in dominant academic
literacy practices as well as provide
opportunities for challenging aspects of such
practices (2006, p.33). Cf. writing mentors
scheme. Does WiD encourage this dialogic approach
or does it perhaps reinforce dominant practice,
seeking to help students master the conventions
but perhaps being less interested in challenging
how things are done? - Or does this depend on the goals and interests of
the lecturer?
23- www.writenow.ac.uk
- www.londonmet.ac.uk/writingcentre
- Peter ONeill peter.oneill_at_londonmet.ac.uk
- Kathy Harrington k.harrington_at_londonmet.ac.uk
24Works cited
- Bean, John, C. (2001). Engaging Ideas. The
Professors Guide to Integrating Writing,
Critical Thinking, and Active Learning in the
Classroom. San Francisco Jossey-Bass. - Lea, Mary R. and Street, Brian V. (1998). Student
Writing in Higher Education an Academic
Literacies Approach. Studies in Higher Education,
23(2) 157-72. - Lillis, Theresa M. (2006). Moving towards an
"academic literacies" pedagogy Dialogues of
participation. In Lisa Ganobcsik-Williams (Ed.),
Teaching academic writing in UK higher education.
Houndmills Palgrave Macmillan 30-45. - McLeod, Susan and Maimon, Elaine (2000).
Clearing the Air WAC Myths and Realities.
College English, 62 573-83. - Monroe, Jonathan (2002). Writing and Revising the
Disciplines. Ithaca Cornell University. - Monroe, Jonathan (2003). Local Knowledges, Local
Practices - Writing in the Disciplines at Cornell.
Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh.. - Wingate, Ursula (2006). Doing away with "study
skills." Teaching in Higher Education, 11
457-69.