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Our
Approach: Learning to Write, Writing-to-Learn*
Learning
To Write
Writing to communicate,
which we call "formal writing," is an essential academic
and professional skill. But how do students' undergraduate experiences
advance them towards writing competence at the professional level?
Currently at UW-L, students take a freshman composition course and
at least two writing emphasis
courses. These are valuable experiences, but can they fully prepare
students for the academic, scholarly, and professional writing they
will encounter? It seems that in relying on three courses we are
ignoring a significant resource. Since scholarly and professional
writing are so thoroughly grounded in the discourse conventions
of the disciplines, we should look to the academic disciplines to
play a key role in developing writing competence, making learning
to write well an integral part of the student's major.
Of course, writing competence,
which develops over a long period of time, neither begins nor ends
at the university. But the university experience-which should be
a significant period of intellectual development-can and should
be a significant opportunity for developing strong writing skills.
Our aim is to help faculty establish programs that support the long-term
development of students' writing competence. We believe that students
learn to write well when they:
- understand the kinds
of writing expected of them,
- internalize the criteria
that define good writing,
- experience guided
practice in which their writing is shaped through a process of
revision and editing, thus internalizing an efficient and effective
composing process,
- learn to compose
with a strong awareness of disciplinary conventions and the needs,
knowledge, and attitudes of their audiences, and
- become progressively
better at self assessment.
We do not have a preconceived,
one-size-fits-all definition of "writing competence."
Rather, in this project, faculty participants define competence
as it applies to their disciplines and to their undergraduate students.
To facilitate this analysis, we distinguish among three broad categories
of formal writing relevant to the undergraduate major.
Academic
writing. Perhaps the most common type of formal writing
in school is purely academic. Its major purpose is for students
to demonstrate their knowledge about a specific subject. It is prompted
by instructor questions to describe, explain, discuss, analyze,
evaluate (and so forth) and is written for the teacher as the sole
audience for the work. Many types of reports and papers fall into
this category: essay exams, short answers on exams, research projects,
book reports, papers that analyze or critique a specific topic,
issue or problem, etc.
Scholarly writing.
This includes all the types of writing a working scholar might do.
The purpose of such writing is to communicate about the ideas, theories,
inquiry methods, and research findings of the discipline. Majoring
in a discipline involves entering into and becoming a member of
a discourse community-learning to think and communicate like other
members of the discipline. Thus, an important aspect of teaching
students to write is developing their ability to participate in
the discourse community: to use the well-established conventions,
rules, and practices that govern scholarly communication. The obvious
and most common example of scholarly writing is the article in a
scholarly journal. Other types of scholarly writing include grant
proposals, laboratory reports, field study reports, critical reviews
(of a book, an article, software, a visual object, etc.), review
essays, opinion pieces to a professional journal, scholarly response
articles, and scholarly essays.
Professional workplace
writing. This includes all the writing a working professional
must engage in. Some graduates will engage directly in the scholarly
discourse of their discipline after graduation; many will become
professionals whose primary work is not scholarly. Academic majors,
after all, are also pathways to future employment, and a university
education can help prepare students for the kinds of writing common
in the workplace and professional life. Of course, it is not possible
to prepare students for every type of writing they will encounter,
but students should have some experience with and expertise in common
forms of writing used in the professional workplace. Perhaps most
importantly, students should develop a facility to analyze a communicative
situation and determine what kind of writing is most appropriate
for specific audiences and contexts. Some examples of workplace
writing include program proposals, business letters, interoffice
memos, reports to co-workers, feasibility studies, program assessments
and evaluations, and many different types of writing for lay audiences,
such as brochures, pamphlets, guides, instruction sheets, etc.
In summary, a writing-in-the-major
program develops students' capacities to write well in academic,
scholarly, and professional contexts.
Writing-To-Learn
The term "writing-to-learn"
refers to writing activities intended primarily to facilitate or
develop students' understanding and thinking. Writing-to-learn activities
are a necessary complement to formal writing in that a major cause
of poor formal writing is poor understanding of the subject matter.
In terms of a student's intellectual development, writing-to-learn
may be even more important than formal writing since writing-to-learn
serves as a vehicle through which students build their understanding
of subject matter. During the writing-to-learn process, the main
focus is on making sense of the material and not on communicating
it in a specific format to an audience. To illustrate the nature
of writing-to-learn, consider the following classroom episodes.
In the middle of a class
period, just after explaining an important idea, the instructor
pauses and says, "All right, let's stop and think about this
for a moment. Does anyone have any questions or comments?"
The room is silent and eventually one or two hands go up. Students'
questions focus on minor details they want clarified. The instructor
answers these and then moves on to the next segment of the class.
Consider the same classroom
situation, but this time after the instructor completes the explanation,
she pauses and says, "All right, let's stop and think about
this for a few minutes. Here's what I want you to do. Take out a
piece of blank paper. Don't put your name on it. Now in the next
three minutes I want you to answer this question." The instructor
poses a question related to the concept she just explained. Students
write for a few minutes, and then the teacher interrupts, "Okay,
now, even though you may not be completely done with your thought,
turn to the person next to you and explain your responses to each
other." After several minutes of discussion by the student
pairs, the teacher interrupts again and asks for volunteers to give
their answers to the question. Quite a few hands go up, and the
instructor selects four students to explain their ideas. As they
do so, the teacher emphasizes essential points and helps clarify
misunderstandings.
In the first scenario,
the instructor stops to give students an opportunity to ask questions
or comment on the topic. However, the opportunity typically produces
fairly low level student responses. And this is actually to be expected.
Some research indicates that students do not reflect on the material
in these situations, but simply wait for someone to ask a question
so the instructor can answer it and then move on. In contrast, the
second scenario illustrates how writing-rather than provoking them
to await an answer-will actually engage students in thinking about
the course material in substantive and sustained ways.
Note how the writing
episode contributes to students' learning. First, writing a response
engages students in taking stock of what they understand and, possibly,
what they still do not understand. Second, talking about their responses
with a classmate provides an additional opportunity to clarify and
extend their understanding of the material. For the act of explaining
an idea to another person involves articulating the relationships
and connections among facts and ideas. Moreover, listening to another
student's explanation creates an opportunity to compare one's own
understanding with a different version. And third, discussing their
responses in class externalizes students' thinking so the instructor
can take note of misconceptions, offer alternative views, and highlight
ideas that students still do not seem to grasp. In effect, the
apparently simple writing activity prompts knowledge building activities
about the subject.
This example illustrates
a key pointwriting can be a successful vehicle for learning
if it is used strategically to engage students in ways of thinking
about the subject that lead to deeper understanding. It is not
writing per se that matters but how students interact with the material
through writing that matters. Students develop understanding
when they explain, when they apply knowledge to new problems or
situations, when they develop an interpretation or perspective,
when they analyze, when they evaluate, when they integrate and synthesize
ideas.
However, it is important
to note that not all writing activities involve students in making
sense of the subject matter. Taking notes, for example, can be a
rote learning exercise that does little to promote understanding.
And, writing assignments that primarily involve simple recall of
facts and ideas do not necessarily build students' understanding
of the material.
In a nutshell, effective
writing-to-learn activities are sense making activities that
involve students in making connections among disconnected facts
and ideas, discerning relationships among ideas, relating new information
to what one already knows, applying concepts and theories-whatever
actively engages the student in developing understanding.
The idea that writing
can enhance student understanding and thinking is a central premise
of the Writing-in-the-Major Project, and we want to promote the
use of writing-to-learn in three important ways:
1. Integrating and
coordinating writing-to-learn throughout the major. Writing-to-learn
tends to be used idiosyncratically by instructors. We believe that
faculty could use writing-to-learn collectively and more systematically
to attain broader student learning outcomes in the major. This project
offers the opportunity for instructors to think beyond individual
course goals and coordinate their efforts to use writing to attain
shared learning goals with their majors.
2. Promoting skilled
learning and thinking through writing. There is a difference
between using writing-to-learn strategies in your classes to help
students understand the subject and teaching students how to use
writing as a learning strategy. A goal of this project is to teach
students how, when, and why to use writing as a way to better understand
and think about the subject. Or to put it another way, the goal
is to get students to move beyond complying with (or resisting)
writing-to-learn assignments and to foster independent use of writing
as a tool for learning and thinking.
3. Understanding
how students learn. Writing-to-learn provides a window into
students' thinking. Teachers who have a keen sense of how students
construe the subject matter are in a better position to design and
use knowledge building activities.
A focus on learning
with understanding. As teachers, we all strive to foster students'
understanding of important concepts, ideas, and skills. Yet a large
body of research indicates that students often acquire little more
than a passing familiarity of our subjects. Surely, this is not
satisfactory-particularly when there are solutions to the problem.
We contend that writing, when used strategically, can promote learning
with understanding. But designing assignments that lead to understanding
requires careful thought. There are, after all, plenty of ways that
writing can lead to little more than rote learning. This occurs
when students perceive writing assignments as busy work or when
assignments merely ask students to transcribe ideas. In order to
use writing to foster learning with understanding, it is important
to consider several interrelated issues:
1. Determine what
is worthy of understanding. We all strive for something more
than superficial understanding or surface learning in our students;
but students encounter far more information than they can possibly
digest. There is good evidence that when students are deluged with
information, they resort to rote learning strategies. Rather
than try to make sense of the material, they try to memorize it.
We do not oppose exposing students to a lot of information, but
at the same time we cannot expect students to understand all of
it deeply. To deal with this quintessential problem of the Information
Age, the instructor must first recognize the difference between
having information and understanding information within a conceptual
or theoretical construct. Then, you must determine which ideas are
central to understanding and which are secondary. We believe that
instructors need to make critical distinctions between ideas students
should be familiar with and those that should become part of their
enduring understanding of the subject, just as they must make distinctions
between which information is crucial to understanding and which
is secondary.
2. Engage students
in performances of understanding. Students demonstrate their
understanding in complex activities in which they use knowledge
to accomplish larger goals such as conducting an analysis, applying
new knowledge
to solve problems, articulating an argument, making a case, developing
a position, interpreting a theory or text. Writing-to-learn activities
should be viewed as "performances of understanding" in
which students do not simply demonstrate their grasp of the subject
but advance it further. For example, when students are asked to
explain an idea, they need to consider how various parts of the
concept or concepts are related to one another. The act of finding
relationships and connections among ideas is a sense making activity-it
is an act of understanding. So the process of explaining not only
externalizes students' understanding, it is a knowledge building
activity as well.
3. Address difficulties
in understanding the subject matter. Writing-to-learn can play
a key role in developing students' understanding of difficult material.
In all fields, students encounter persistent problems, difficulties,
stumbling blocks, and misconceptions as they try to understand the
subject. Instructors can use specific problem areas as the bases
for designing writing exercises and assignments to help students
overcome persistent difficulties.
Examples
of Writing-to-Learn Activities that Promote Understanding
Writing-to-learn activities
can be used in a number of ways-before, during, and after class.
They can be short and unrelated to one another or linked into a
series that builds cumulative understanding of the course material
over the entire semester. Most importantly, their use depends upon
instructors' goals for student understanding. To design them effectively,
an instructor must remember that these activities are tools that
serve two major functions. First and foremost, writing-to-learn
engages students in making sense of the course material. Second,
writing-to-learn can be used to externalize students' thinking,
providing the instructor with information about what and how students
understand the subject matter. Consider these examples.
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Understanding
Hard Ideas. Every course has certain concepts that are
especially difficult for a large number of students. If you
are still looking for strategies to deal with these "hard
ideas," consider this. Before you teach the idea(s),
ask students to write a response to a prompt or question that
elicits their knowledge of the concept(s). It is best if you
can ask questions that get at the root of students' basic
assumptions and beliefs about the topic. Their answers indicate
how they already conceive of the concept(s), and will probably
reveal important misconceptions or gaps in their knowledge.
Then as you teach the class, ask students to respond again
to the same initial question(s) (e.g., midway through material
and/or after you finish teaching the topic). These responses
can be used in several ways to foster student understanding.
For example, have students compare their initial ideas with
their later versions. Or ask students to read their responses
in class, discuss them, and then further develop the ideas.
Or ask students (even in very large classes) to read their
responses to the person in the next seat, and then discuss
the similarities and differences between the two versions.
In each case, students have an opportunity to analyze and
extend their understanding. Moreover, their responses indicate
their progress in understanding the material during the semester.
The Muddiest
Point. A general way to monitor student understanding
that works well in large classes is to ask students at the
end of the period to explain briefly in writing what they
thought were: 1) the big point (or main idea) they learned
in class and 2) the main unanswered question or muddiest point
from the class period. This technique is called "The
Minute Paper," and generally takes no more than a few
minutes to write. The activity engages students in monitoring
and evaluating their own understanding (i.e., making sense
of what they learned). These provide an overview of students'
thinking, common patterns of responses, and prominent misunderstandings-which
the instructor can respond to at the next class period.
Class Preparation
Assignments. Lack of student preparation for class is
a common problem. One way to improve the quality of their
preparation is to ask students to respond in writing before
class to several thought provoking questions. These could
be based on assigned readings, but the questions should relate
directly to the topic of the next class period. To insure
they respond thoughtfully, ask students to email their responses
to you the day before class. Or, better yet, have several
of them post their responses on a web site where all the students
are asked to read them prior to class. In addition, ask everyone
to bring a hard copy to class. Not only does this engage students
more thoughtfully in the material, but their responses help
you gauge their understanding before class: very useful information
in planning for class.
Developing Durable Understanding. We know students'
understanding and expertise develop over a long period of
time. That development is not a linear process of just adding
more information, bit by bit, to memory. Instead, learning
with understanding entails restructuring, reorganizing, revising
and sometimes rejecting what one already knows in response
to new concepts and information. Operating out of this sense
of intellectual development, instructors in an academic program
might use a series of writing-to-learn assignments throughout
a sequence of courses to foster enduring understanding of
important disciplinary knowledge. These could be designed
to examine the subject from different perspectives, to integrate
ideas from across courses, and to build more elaborated understanding.
Such an approach would have the significant additional benefit
of being used for formal assessments of students' understanding
in the program as well. For example, students might be expected
to respond to a set of prompts at several points in the major
(freshman, junior, senior) and comparison of a student's responses
at these intervals should reveal how her understanding has
developed. Of course, the assignments should be intrinsically
valuable for students insofar as they involve integrating
and synthesizing ideas from multiple sources and engage them
in careful reflection about significant disciplinary knowledge.
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Writing is most likely
to be an effective learning tool when it engages students in making
sense out of the subject matter and when it helps students work
through conceptual pitfalls, misconceptions, and problems. However,
not all writing activities are equally appropriate for every discipline,
instructor, and situation. And this is why it is important for instructors
to analyze how students learn or fail to learn the subject you teach.
We believe the analysis will help you identify key learning problems
and the places in your courses where writing-to-learn can be useful.
And perhaps more important, the analysis will help you design effective
activities to promote learning with understanding.
Putting
It All Together: Elements of a Writing-in-the-Major Program
Writing-in-the-Major
is a programmatic and developmental approach to advance students'
formal writing and writing-to-learn in the major. Since writing,
like other complex skills, develops over a long period of time,
it is important to create a program that extends across the entire
undergraduate experience. By acting collectively-with shared goals,
expectations, criteria, and standards-instructors can have a potent,
cumulative effect on students' writing and learning. A writing-in-the-major
program has six essential features:
Clearly defined goals,
outcomes, and standards for student writing in the major. Coherent
goals, outcomes, and standards-defined by the department-are extremely
important. They provide students with a model of the competence
they are expected to develop. Imagine trying to learn a complex
skill without a sense of what accomplished performance looks like-learning
to play the violin, say, without ever having heard a skilled performer.
Or imagine trying to develop a complex skill when the performance
standards change continually. Both of these conditions are what
students typically experience as instructors use widely different
standards. The lack of consistent performance standards makes it
very difficult to develop a strong sense of good writing and promotes
the belief that good writing is simply a matter of the individual
instructor's personal preferences.
A shared evaluation
framework. Faculty use a shared evaluation system for assessing
the quality of students' formal writing based on department-wide
criteria. This does not mean that every instructor must use this
framework for every piece of student writing. It does mean that
faculty agree to use some shared criteria to evaluate student work.
A consistent evaluation system helps students internalize the criteria
for effective performance. If students experience quite different
evaluative criteria as they go from one class to the next, they
quite rightly develop the idea that those criteria are a matter
of the instructors' taste. Rather than developing a strong sense
of good writing, students focus on figuring out what the instructor
wants-which tends to be different from one class to the next. This
lack of consistency on the part of faculty can be a major reason
for students' failure to show cumulative progress in their development
as writers as well as a reason for their failure to be reflective
and skilled at self-assessment.
Effective writing
processes throughout the major. Formal writing skill develops
best when students engage in a recursive process of writing drafts,
revising, and editing. Students need feedback and guidance throughout
the process in the form of clear expectations, models of acceptable
work, help in shaping their subject and purpose, feedback on approaches,
and so on. A writing-in-the-major program structures effective writing
processes which includes well-informed feedback and guidance.
The most labor intensive
part of teaching writing is providing effective feedback and guidance.
However, it is unfeasible and probably ineffective to respond in
detail to all student writing. This project departs from the idea
that the only way students can learn to write well is by having
each instructor labor over students' every written word. The challenge
is to determine when and how to give feedback and guidance, selecting
optimum "teaching moments." For example, since writing-to-learn
activities focus on the development of ideas, you wouldn't choose
to give feedback on the mechanical aspects writing. Instead, you
would give feedback about their understanding-for that, after all,
was the point of the assignment. Or, in the case of formal writing
assignments, you would give feedback at pivotal points in the development
of the assignment when students can still make revisions, rather
than after the assignment is completed.
Integration of writing-to-learn
throughout the major. Faculty coordinate the use of writing-to-learn
strategies throughout the major (i.e., strategies intended to help
students learn and understand the subject matter of the discipline).
The writing-to-learn component of the project is an opportunity
for faculty to cultivate students' deep understanding of important
disciplinary knowledge. Recognizing that students rarely achieve
the depth of understanding we want, this project invites instructors
to approach the problem of student understanding programmatically,
by identifying the "big ideas" all students should understand
and by using writing as one of the tools to help students achieve
that understanding.
Developing mindful
writers. Faculty help students develop their abilities to evaluate
their own learning and writing. This is an explicit effort to promote
students' effective self-assessment and increasing independence
as learners and writers. A good writing-in-the-major program produces
students who not only write well, but who are mindful of how to
improve their own skills. An important goal of the project is to
cultivate students' capacities for self-assessment and independent
work. As students progress through the major, they should internalize
the criteria and standards for writing in the program and become
better able to judge the qualities of their own work.
A strategy to improve
the writing-in-the-major program. Faculty collectively assess
student learning and writing and use the results to make decisions
about how to improve teaching and student progress in the program.
Assessment is essential for the long-term development and improvement
of the program and its goals. By using shared criteria to evaluate
student writing, teams will be able to develop a way to collectively
analyze student progress and make changes in the program to better
meet its goals. There is an opportunity in this project to use assessment
of student writing as part of the department's assessment of student
learning outcomes. We encourage faculty teams to think about how
to accomplish both types of assessment through a single process.
Recommended
Practices for Writing-in-the-Major
Clearly defined goals,
outcomes and standards for student writing in the major
- Publish goals, criteria,
and standards for student writing in "handbooks" and/or
on a web site.
- Make available examples
of student writing. Preferably, these should be annotated to highlight
key features of written work.
- Expose students to
examples of good--and poor--published work, again annotating or
pointing out what effective and what is not.
- In classes, call
attention to how writing of students or professionals meets departmental
criteria and standards.
A shared evaluation
framework
- Instructors agree
to use a shared set of criteria and standards to evaluate student
writing.
- Instructors develop
some common language and nomenclature for evaluating student writing.
- Instructors use common
evaluation rubrics which incorporate the departmental criteria
and standards, and modify the rubrics to suit different writing
assignments.
Effective writing
processes throughout the major
- Students analyze
and evaluate their own and their fellow students' written work
according to departmental criteria and standards.
- Instructors provide
clear criteria and standards for writing assignments linked to
departmental criteria and standards.
- Instructors give
feedback strategically.
- Students learn to
revise their work in response to feedback and guidance.
Integration of writing-to-learn
throughout the major
- Instructors identify
disciplinary knowledge that all students are expected to understand
well.
- Instructors use writing-to-learn
activities to monitor the development of students' understanding
in the program.
- Instructors use writing-to-learn
to address persistent student learning problems in the major.
Developing mindful
writers
- Students analyze
and evaluate their own work according to departmental criteria
and standards.
- The department creates
"self assessment standards" that clarify progressively
more sophisticated self assessment skills.
A strategy to improve
the writing-in-the-major program
- The department evaluates
writing developmentally at several points in the students' program
(e.g., entering, sophomore year, junior, exit)
- Students learn about
their progress from the assessment process.
*
Working paper Last revised May 2001. For additional information
about this article, contact the authors, Bill
Cerbin and Terry Beck.
©2001,
Bill Cerbin and Terry Beck
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