Writing Reform
Students, faculty warm to changes in writing course
Friday, January 12, 2001
print
|
email
|
There is writing, and there is academic writing. Joseph Harris and
Van Hillard believe that the difference between the two is at the
heart of the first-year writing course.
The challenge of changing students' ideas about writing hasn't won
the program a lot of popularity. In 1996, voicing common
complaints, a student writing in stated "the
course material is boring, hard to understand and not relevant.
Some of the exercises that the course dictates to be necessary are
totally irrelevant and meaningless. The course does not seem to
take into consideration students' interest as important."
The changes start with the instructors. In place of graduate
students -- who did the bulk of the teaching for many years -- most
of the teaching is now done by nine newly hired writing
postdoctoral Mellon writing fellows, who this each taught three
courses per semester. These fellows, said Joseph Harris, director
of the university writing program, bring specific expertise in
writing instruction, but also enthusiasm for the project. For the
first time, the instructors have arranged the course around a
central issue.
"These are people who are interested in developing as undergraduate
teachers," Harris said. "They wanted time and space to hone their
ideas of undergraduate teaching. Furthermore, they all showed an
eager anticipation to work on a collective project. They are the
right people to teach this type of course."
One of the fellows, Troy Dostert, is teaching a course on the
common good and the boundaries to personal freedom. Dostert, who
first taught Writing 20 last fall, said students are responding to
the course and its theme.
"I've enjoyed thinking carefully about what it means to introduce
students to the world of scholarship, something I think all
professors here have a responsibility to do for their students,"
Dostert said. "Since writing is at the core of serious scholarship,
you can't do the latter without first learning the former. I think
that although the writing program has been much maligned in the
past, sometimes deservingly so, it also serves a function that is
absolutely critical to the mission of the university."
Dostert said the students have brought a "level of enthusiasm and
intensity" to the course. "Learning writing is more like learning
an art than acquiring a set of tools - it really requires
persistent and arduous effort to become proficient in academic
writing," he added. "In most, cases, I find Duke freshmen ready to
give it a shot, and I've been encouraged by their willingness not
to take this as a mere exercise, but as a serious activity."
Other long-time teachers of the writing course said also they have
seen better responses to the new shape of the program. Robert
Bliwise, editor of Duke Magazine, said shaping the class
around the theme of "The Culture of the Campus" has helped students
get into the demands of the course.
"My sense is that the energy I've seen the students put into the
course this semester was greater than in the previous years, where
maybe the courses were more formulaic," Bliwise said. "The writing
they did as the semester went on showed off more original thinking
and personal engagement than what I had seen previously.
"And it was more educational and interesting for me as well,"
Bliwise said. "I brought in campus people to talk about issues such
as student drinking patterns, and I found myself really
appreciating how tough it is for a first-year student to experience
a climate that revolves around alcohol as a social force."
Some improvement has come as well, Harris said, from Curriculum
2000, which made writing one of the focuses of the curriculum. In
addition to the first-year writing course, Curriculum 2000 also
requires students to take at least two courses designated as
writing-intensive. These include a component of looking at how
writing is done within a discipline; in most cases, students will
take one of these writing-intensive courses in their major.
Harris said these disciplinary writing courses relieve some of the
burden on the first-year course.
"In the past, when there was only a single university writing
course, that course needed to try to teach a number of things all
at once: the process of drafting and revising, the craft of
research, use of the library, documenting sources, avoiding
plagiarism, and so on. With the new curriculum, we know that other
faculty will also be working with students on practices of the
research and writing in their own disciplines, so we can thus focus
more closely and productively on teaching close reading and
critical writing."
The new curriculum brought one other advantage, Harris said. Many
of the graduate students who previously taught the first-year
course are now assisting faculty teaching Writing in the Discipline
courses in their own departments. This means graduate students
didn't lose an important source of income and ended up teaching
writing courses that are more appropriate to their research
interests.
More changes are coming. A new grant from the Mellon Foundation
will enable the program to reduce the teaching loads of the Mellon
fellows to five courses a year. The grant also will support
mentoring and professional development opportunities for the
fellows.
Duke is not alone among major universities in examining their
first-year writing programs, Hillard said. But Duke is at the
forefront of a trend to use these programs to develop the students'
intellectual and rhetorical skills. This is a skill that writing
instruction is particularly well-suited for, he said.
"We've been thinking about ways in which a student can be thought
of as an engaged citizen," Hillard said. "Obviously, a lot of these
students are going to grow up to be leaders in many different
settings. Part of what we want to do in the writing course is to
help prepare students as responsible thinkers able to consider
disagreements from a variety of perspectives. Intellectual writing
can do that. The act of discovery through writing helps open
students up to other voices, ideas and claims in particular
ways.
"It's common today to think that thoughtful writing is merely the
presentation of contrasting arguments, some sort of
point-counterpoint. What we are teaching is something different.
What we are teaching is that the act of deliberation is a matter of
exploring situations and seeing how many ways its claims can be
contested by a diverse population. They learn that sometimes
writing doesn't resolve an issue but rather opens it up. That's a
lesson and a skill they'll carry with them into other classes and
outside the classroom in their roles as public citizens."