Sunday, September 6, 2015

Prompt: What is the most difficult thing to teach in the teaching of writing, and how do you go about teaching that?

My teaching experience is practically non-existent. As such, there are two ways to approach this question: as a fledgling grader for the Texas Tech First Year Composition program, or as a student of writing who’s watched her skills (and her peers’ skills) develop from the construction of sentences into investigated, audience-driven text.

One common thread among these experiences (although certainly not the only) is the difficulty in developing critical thinking. Among the 27 student papers I graded this last week, only a handful were able to identify choices made by the author and consider a deeper purpose behind these choices. Many papers summarized rather than analyzed. Of those that analyzed rhetorical choices within the text, nearly all pointed back at the author’s text as a purpose within itself, i.e. “The author used informal language because she wanted to write an informal text.” Some of these same students said they had received a foundation in rhetorical analysis in high school (and on that note, some of the students who successfully investigated a purpose recalled minimal writing experiences). Not a single paper that I graded critiqued how effective the author was in achieving their purpose.

But how does one teach critical thinking? Again we encounter that daunting gap from high school to college writing: shouldn’t the students already know this?

The difficulty in teaching critical thinking is not restricted to “inexperienced” writers. I saw students struggle with critical thinking in my upper-level undergraduate writing courses. To me, critical thinking is not only about examining the unseen in the text, but engaging in this process without prompt. (How many students would even think to question the authors of their assigned reading without first being told that there was something worth examining there?)

My favorite and ultimately most valuable courses were those with little guidance. How long should an assignment be? As long as it needs to be. What kind of analysis are we applying to this text? Whichever kind you think applies. The wonderful thing about this kind of teaching is that it forces students to engage with what THEY think, rather than what they think the instructor thinks.

When do we take off the training wheels and encourage students to do their own investigation? How do we get students to the point where they’re ready to address their own thoughts in a text – no prompt required? The obvious answer is “When they enter college/university,” but this answer becomes a lot less obvious when you see the work of First Year Composition writers.  

So I’ll be frank: I don’t have the answers. If anyone did, we’d have a standardized First Year Composition course across the discipline. Perhaps a collaboration between teachers of K-12 and college professors would shrink the gap. Perhaps there’s an alternative to First Year Composition – a two-semester course where the first semester is really there to gauge where students’ writing skills are at and give them feedback to encourage mature writing. (And I think at some universities, FYC serves as this kind of mediator.)


I think what it comes down to is that students are terrified to get “bad” grades. (Product versus Process, right?) They’ve been taught that the best way to receive “good” grades is to follow directions to a tee – but, I would argue, this isn’t the best way to encourage students’ unprompted critical thinking. Perhaps at the end of this semester (and my first semester of grading) I’ll have more answers.

5 comments:

  1. Aubrey,

    I find it interesting and also unsurprising that the students who boasted experience in rhetorical analysis didn't analyze well. I often find that my self-proclaimed writing geniuses are some of my weakest writers. There have actually been studies that show that people who have low skill levels tend assess their skill levels as much higher than they actually are: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    I know. Wikipedia. Sorry :)

    I was happy to see that someone else also thought that critical thinking is the hardest thing we have to teach to our students. I enjoyed your post because you provide insights that I hadn't thought of in connection with teaching critical thinking.

    I especially resonated with your discussion of the fear of bad grades. I know I was scared to try new things as an undergrad because I was afraid of how it would affect my grade. Knowing what I do now, I regret that mindset, but I don't think that anyone could have changed my perspective at that time. I thought grades equaled success in learning, and our students probably think the same thing. There is no perfect way to help students see the difference between grades and learning. I have seen teacher reward students for taking risks, whether or not the risk paid off, but this solution has the potential to make risk-taking yet another hurdle for that good grade. There are no easy answers, as you say. Perhaps at the end of the semester both of us will have better answers.

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    1. Honestly, I'd love to be giving students feedback on their writing and no grades whatsoever. We discussed this "radical" method of teaching/grading in our section of 5060 - the major problem being how to motivate students without assigning grades.

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    2. Sorry for jumping in on your reply, Aubrey, but I like this idea! I feel like an open atmosphere with writing can make students feel more comfortable. When I was an undergrad I was blind to the comments and focused on the grades because I thought that was the most important thing. So that is an interesting question, how do we motivate students without assigning grades? Maybe in-class prompts or in-group activities to help them with critical thinking.

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    3. I think it becomes easier to motivate students once they're closer to "the goal" - the career, for most. It's easier to show a tech writing major that writing is inherently important to them. But an accounting major, for example, might not see the value in that skill without an external motivating factor (like grades). Especially for first year students who don't necessarily have direction yet...They can't see that horizon or how writing will help them reach it.

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  2. Good reply to MaryAnn. Like you say, it seems that most of what we do is motivation, and that motivation is both an art and a science. Coming up with ways of researching students is critical. For instance, I can work with students in our class during class, office hours, via email, blogs, on formal writing... there are different ways I can help inspire or motivate students, when they're most on task on something, whatever that may be. What one calls motivation, another calls guidance, as you say. Scaffolding.

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