Important Conversations: Blog Summary and Reflection
The assigned readings for this course, the readings I chose for my own blog, and the readings and reviews of my peers contribute to an image of rhetoric and composition as a field alive with important conversations. Taken together, these readings connect to a number of threshold concepts vital to the effective teaching of first year composition (FYC). Among these, one concept appeared most frequently; multiple literacies and multiple Englishes (to use Canagarajah’s language) deserve respect and power in FYC. A connected concept, addressed by several in my group, is that basic writers can succeed in FYC with well-designed support.
The idea of a multiliteracies is not new to the field; the New London Group discussed such an approach in their 1994 meeting (63). Numerous publications since, however, demonstrate that the academy still has not fully and successfully embraced multiliteracies. In her first blog, King reviews J. Michael Rifenburg’s “Student-Athletes, Prior Knowledge, and Threshold Concepts,” in which Rifenberg explores the unique literacies of student-athletes. While Rifenberg helps students make connections between writing and body movement, Jennifer A. Hudson connects students to an multiliteracies and a variety of modalities by using technology. King, in her third blog, reviews Hudson’s “Writing, Technology and Writing Technologies: Developing Multiple Literacies in First-Year College Composition Students.” McGarry, in his third blog, reviews Bomer and Maloch’s “Research and Policy: Diverse Local Literacies and Standardizing Policies.” Bomer and Maloch encourage a shift away from standardizing education at a national level toward, as McGarry phrases it, a “shift back into the local and community sphere.” Class readings that support multiliteracies include articles by Reid and Kroll, Canagaragah, Kei Matsuda, and Downs and Wardle.
Several of my group members and I explored an idea closely related to multiliteracies: translingualism and multiple Englishes. In my second blog, I reviewed Toth’s “Beyond Assimilation: Tribal Colleges, Basic Writing, and the Exigencies of Settler Colonialism,” in which she discusses her success in teaching FYC at Diné College by connecting with the culture of Native American students. Konstantinou explores Appalachian English in her second blog, a review of Luhman’s “Appalachian English Stereotypes: Language Attitudes in Kentucky.” Luhman’s research revealed that the Appalachian accent is frequently stereotyped as an indicator of low intelligence. In his review of Ted Kesler’s “Teachers’ Texts in Culturally Responsive Teaching,” McGarry considers his own text choices, theorizing that a focus on teaching the traditional, largely monolinguistic, English literature cannon may negatively impact students.
Another topic several of my peers and I chose to explore is how basic writers can best be supported in FYC. This topic connects to multiple literacies and Englishes because trouble with standard written English is often what gets students labeled “basic writers,” a label that may result in their being excluded from the FYC classroom. In my first blog, I review Cleary’s “How Antonio Graduated On Out of Here: Improving the Success of Adult Students with an Individualized Writing Course.” Cleary shows how struggling writers at DePaul University who were enrolled in an individualized workshop persisted in college at a rate higher than the national average. Rodby and Fox discuss similarly successful outcomes for basic writers at California State University, Chico. In my fifth blog, I review their article “Basic Work and Material Acts: The Ironies, Discrepancies, and Disjunctures of Basic Writing and Mainstreaming.” Rodby and Fox here explain how mainstreaming basic writers while simultaneously supporting them via enrollment in an adjunct workshop resulted in the majority of students studied passing FYC the first time.
In her third blog post, Konstantinou reviews Penrose’s “Academic Literacy Perceptions and Performance: Comparing First-Generation and Continuing-Generation College Students.” Though first-generation students are not necessarily basic writers, Penrose finds they do come to college having been exposed to a significantly narrower range of vocabulary than their continuing-generation peers, and this is reflected “not only on measures or general academic preparedness but more specifically in their perceptions of their own academic literacy skills” (Penrose 441). In her first blog, a review of Jesnek’s “Peer Editing in the 21st Century College Classroom: Do Beginning Composition Students Truly Reap the Benefits?” Keel addresses another issue weaker writers may face. In short, Jesnek found that rarely are basic writers able to significantly improve their drafts as a result of peer editing, particularly when paired with a writer having similarly weak skills. Additionally, when a weak and strong writer were paired, the strong writer often felt resentment at having given but not received valuable feedback.
Reflecting upon my own pedagogy in light of the readings summarized above, I am challenged in some aspects and affirmed in others. On the topic of linguistic diversity, I express respect and grant power to multiple literacies and Englishes in my FYC classes; when evaluating essays, I only mark a non-standard word or phrasing choice if I think that particular student writer would benefit from my doing so. Often, my second language learners ask me to point out non-standard features of their writing, but I do not penalize for non-standard choices as long as the student’s meaning is still clear. I do, however, need to advocate for a broader understanding and acceptance of multiple literacies outside of my courses; there are departments in which, to borrow Kei Matsuda’s phrasing, “the myth of linguistic homogeneity” is alive and well. I also feel that I assist basic writers well. They are mainstreamed, and I have seen students with weak writing skills make significant improvements when I guide them via personal writing goals. My department did, for two semesters, implement a mandatory workshop for FYC students who tested as having basic skills, but we saw little gain in student success as a result. Cleary’s article, however, as well as Rodby and Fox’s show me where our workshop likely went wrong in terms of time, content, and format, and after more research, I do feel advocating for a revised version is something I can and should do to better support basic writers at McPherson College.
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