Title: Using
1Using Writing to Learn
- Informal and short writing assignments to get
students involved
OUE Writing Workshop, Emory University, Joonna
Smitherman Trapp (2014)
2Action and Motion
- Action
- Expresses the will and intention of the actor
- In legitimate actions we make for ourselves a new
charactera new person - The agent is an author of his acts, which are
descended from him, being good progeny if he is
good, or bad progeny if he is bad, wise progeny
is he is wise, silly progeny if he is silly. And,
conversely, his acts can make him or remake him
in accordance with their nature. They would be
his product and/or he would be theirs. Kenne
th Burke
3Using Writing as Action
- "Language can move us toward what is good it
can move us toward what is evil or it can, in
hypothetical third place, fail to move us at all - . . . .
- But any utterance is a major assumption of
- responsibility."
-
- Richard M. Weaver, The Ethics of Rhetoric (1953)
4- As teachers we can choose between
- (a) sentencing students to thoughtless
mechanical - operations and
- (b) facilitating their ability to think.
- If students' readiness for more involved thought
processes is bypassed in favor of jamming more
facts and figures into their heads, they will
stagnate at the lower levels of thinking. - But if students are encouraged to try a variety
of thought processes in classes, they can,
regardless of their ages, develop considerable
mental power. Writing is one of the most
effective ways to develop thinking. - "Writing to Learn Means
Learning to Think" Syrene Forsman. (p. 162)
5 Consider
- Write for a few minutes about a time when you
were asked to write or do something in a class
and you realized that the action of writing or
speaking changed you or taught you about yourself
as a thinker or as a person. How did you act
yourself into a new way of being? - Grade school or High School?
- College?
- Grad School?
- Outside of these schooled places?
-
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6Ways to Create Meaning
- Transactional
- (Writing to communicate to others)
- Helping readers to
- Reconsider
- Inform
- Instruct
- Persuade
- Accomplish something
- Act
- Writing to Learn
- (Writing for ourselves, expressive)
- Ordering and representing experience for
understanding - As a way of knowing
- As a tool for discovering
- As a way of shaping meaning
- As a way to reach for understanding
Fulwiler Young Language Connections Writing
and Reading Across the Curriculum, James Britton
(x)
7Writing to Learn
- Brittons vision of how expressive discourse
works - the form of language in which we first-draft
our tentative or speculative ideas. In other
words, it is an essential mode for learningfor
the tentative exploration of new areas of
knowledge (26).
Britton, James. How We Got Here. New Movements
in the Study and Teaching of English. Ed.
Nicholas Bagnall. London Maurice Temple Smith,
1973.
8Writing to Learn
- calls out the internally persuasive voices of the
self to engage with the more authoritarian voices
of the course. - provides a record to aid memory (a kind of
note-taking), to think, work out problems,
discover ideas, engage with readings, and
converse with each other. - invites the student to collaborate in making
meaning in the classroom.
9Writer
Class notes and Discussions
Writers Research
Writers Experiences
Course Texts
Teacher
10 Consider
- What activities are already present in your
class(es) which fall into this Writing to Learn
category? - Writing?
- Speaking?
- Exercise on Blackboard/on the web?
- Take a few minutes and write about one exercise
that you think works well. Theorize a bit about
why it works well. What does it do for student
learning? For forwarding the goals of that class?
11Peter Elbow Writing without Teachers
- Posits a place where there is learning but no
teaching. It is possible to learn something and
not be taught. It is possible to be a student and
not have a teacher (ix). - Teachers are more useful when it is clearer that
they are not necessary (x). - Writing to Learn activities allow the students to
make their own understanding in the context of
the space created and supported by the teacher.
12General ideas about W2L
- Usually shorter assignments
- Impromptu-like feel doing
- Informal and often not-graded
- Can be done out of class or during class time
- Used to help students think through key concepts
or ideas presented in a course - Used to reinforce with practice important
concepts or learning - Can be used to foster discussion
13 W2LStudent perspective
- A good writing assignment
- Addresses me as an active participant in
discourse - Helps me form and reform my own attempts to
understand and think
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14 W2LStudent perspective
- A good writing assignment
- Is given in receptive conditions
- Channels of communication are open
- Others care about what I have to say
- Theres a chance for response and feedback
- Listening happens from all participants in
discourse community
15 W2LStudent perspective
- A good writing assignment
- Is provocativeit gets me going!
- Lets me say something meaningful to methe
questions of the assignment should become my
questions as I write - Relates to purpose of course, and I should be
able to identify with that purpose - Lets me do something meaningful for myself and
with others
16 W2LStudent perspective
- A good writing assignment
- Helps me focus or explore an idea or concept
- Allows me to practice and learn the important
forms of understanding in the course - Allows me to stumble without affecting my final
evaluation in the course or the teachers good
opinion of me
17Samples of Writing Activities
- (see handout for fuller listing of ideas)
- 1Shorter, more informal activities
- 2Shorter, more formal activities
18Samples of more Informal Writing Activities
(on
handout)
- The WAC Clearinghouse is an amazing and
constantly growing resources, including
assignment ideas for W2Learn. - http//wac.colostate.edu/intro/pop2d.cfm
19More Informal Writing Activities
- Short in-class writings5-10 minutes
- Use as a way to begin discussion (can be directed
with prompt or not) - Use to spur lagging discussionhelp them think of
what to say - Use to give for questions or expressions of
confusion - Use at end to sum up lecture or discussion
- Use at end to set goals for a research project or
some other project for the week or weekend - Use at end of peer review session to set revision
goals on a paper or project
20More Informal Writing Activities
-
- Out of Class Writings. Ask for x number of pages
weeklyopen ended, but related to classsuggest
that they might - summarize lectures or readings,
- wrestle or explain why something in the reading
is hard, - disagree with something in class,
- raise a question,
- make connections with learning out of class or in
other classes, - Sometimes teacher will be more directive and
suggest sometimes a prompt or task. These can be
kept in digital forum or a traditional journal,
or handed-in each time.
21More Informal Writing Activities
-
- Double-entry journals (dialectical journals)
- Contemporary Issues Journals or Sightings
journals - Exam prep journals (early in semester hand out
essay exam questions for the semesterhave
students use journaling time to explore answers
to questions) - Writing one sentence onlya thesis writing
exercise, summary of an essays point. Have them
write it in a Question, a statement, or
elaborated in a paragraph
22Ideas for Informal Writing Activities
- Call these writings somethingBiologists
Journal, Readers Logs, Thought Experiments,
Short Assignments, Small Writings, Musings, blog
postsbut something that will imbue them with a
sense of importance in your class - You might give an overall grade for this category
based on the checks you assign or the 1-10 grade
you give - Explain in the syllabus and remind students
during the semester why these small writings are
important and what they are learning from them
23More formal W2Learn The Micro-Theme
- Short formal assignments, usually less than 250
words - Quick and easy to grade
- A small amount of writing built on a great deal
of thinking - Provides much provocation!
- Problem-based rather than task-based
- Sets up rhetorical context for problem
- Allows some freedom for choice in student
response
24The Micro-Theme (Psych)
- Prof. X opens cat food every morning. His cats
run into the kitchen purring and meowing and
rubbing his legs. What examples of classical
conditioning, operant conditioning, and social
learning are at work in this scene? Note that
both the cats and the prof might be exhibiting
conditioned behavior here. - You and fellow classmates have been arguing over
this problem over coffee, and you are convinced
that your colleagues are confused about the
concepts. Write a one page essay (250 words or
less) to set them straight.
25More formal W2Learn Believing Doubting
- Teacher develops arguable propositions (not
having one answer but rather many variables) to
engage the students with disciplinary
controversies - Students take these propositions and bring
evidence and reasoning to bear defending or
denying - Can move into oral debate/discussion in class
- Can then ask students to take the other side
26Believing Doubting
- Cultural Studies
- In recent years, advertising has make enormous
gains in portraying women as strong, independent,
and intelligent. - Literature
- The overriding religious view expressed in Hamlet
is an existential atheism similar to Sartres. - Psychology
- Schizophrenia is a brain disease or Schizophrenia
is a learned behavior.
27More formal W2Learn The Reflection Paper
- Can take several forms
- Reader-response paper
- Personal Reaction paper
- Reflection on the journey of learning over a
whole semester or the course of the development
of a project - Exploratory, tentative, personal,
subjectiveexploring the connections between
course materials and the life experiences and
development of the student - Also designed to help student find a way to speak
back to a reading or text when it is troubling or
challenging
28More formal W2Learn Other alternative
assignments
- Have students write a different genre than might
be normally required in the subject area - a poem from the perspective of a schizophrenic or
other personality type that might seem foreign to
the student - a dialog between two historical figures on
opposite sides of a conflict or debate - A monologue from someone they might have
interviewed for a project for information
29More formal W2Learn Other alternative
assignments
- Have students rewrite the ending or beginning of
a novel or story and reflect on what that does to
the text - A podcast in response to a scholarly essay the
class has discussed. - A myth or parable to express a philosophical or
moral choice or cultural ideal - An autobiography or process journal to show
development in thinking in an area
30Handling the Paper Load
- Remember--informal and often impromptu!
- NOT about correctnessjust them trying and
doinga check or grade 1-10. - Use them in classdont collect or do and use as
an attendance/participation record - Pick up a few select students every day or every
other day. Don't read every word, but skim
quickly to identify tasks students might need
help with--a reading that bogged down in class
discussion ,a page that has very little written,
a page which might be useful to use in a blog
post or email to the class, etc.
31Handling the Paper Load
- Have students share in classmark as a check
because they were there and participatedmake it
a writing and speaking assignment - Ask students to select their best or most
provocative WTL writing for you to review. Or
include a few of their best in a final portfolio. - Ask students to post provocative questions or
summary/analysis of readings on an electronic
bulletin board or Web forum for class comment.
32Handling the Paper Load
- Have students keep and turn them in with the
project to which the small writings are
leadingpart of the project presentation. Can be
evidence of a growth in a reflection letter
attached to their large project (process and
meta-thinking) - Make small writings part of their website for the
classdaily or weekly blog posts, praxis blogs,
critical thinking posts, reading posts that the
teaching can count for grading and simply respond
in class to a select few (or have the students
responsible for responding in class some way)
33 Consider
- Take some time and consider one of your classes.
Perhaps one that students find difficult. - What small writings during the semester might you
offer to help build to that assignment? - How can you get them going?
- Provoke their thinking?
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34References Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas The
Professors Guide to Integrating Writing,
Thinking, and Active Learning in the Classroom.
2nd Ed. San Francisco, CA Jossey-Bass,
2011. Britton, James. Language and Learning.
Penguin,1970. And all his work. Burke, Kenneth.
A Rhetoric of Motives. New York, NY
Prentice-Hall, 1950. Forsman, Syrene. "Writing
to Learn Means Learning to Think.
http//wac.colostate.edu/intro/index.cfm
Fulwiler, Toby and Art Young. Language
Connections Writing and Reading Across the
Curriculum. http//wac.colostate.edu/books/languag
e_connections/ Parker, Robert P. and Vera
Goodkin. The Consequences of Writing. Upper
Montclair, NJ Boyton /Cook. 1987. http//www.qui
nnipiac.edu/prebuilt/pdf/wac/wac-basic_principles.
pdf includes a bank of assignments in various
disciplines WAC Clearinghouse Bibliography on
Writing to Learn http//wac.colostate.edu/intro/p
op4f.cfm