Blog Post (2/6)
Reading chapter four of Talk
About Writing, I was pleasantly surprised to discover that I am already
emulating a lot of the strategies the tutors in the book use. There must be
something kind of intuitive about the exchange of ideas when it comes to writing.
Like the tutors surveyed in the study, I tend to let my students set the agenda
(or “topic episodes”) at the start of each session. Most of my students are
only in the initial brainstorming phase of their writing assignments, so I’m a
little worried about what I will do when confronted with a draft. It is a
little daunting to think about what global issues we might want to tackle first.
I know when I was in undergrad I always (foolishly) considered my first draft my
final draft, so I don’t want to crush too many dreams when, and if, substantial
changes might be necessary in my students’ work. I’m concerned that I might be
asking a few too many limiting leading questions, rather than letting the
students figure it out for themselves. I should remember that if they want to
improve at writing I must be patient enough to let them come to their own
conclusions. Sometimes the awkward silence is a bit much for me – and time is of
the essence in a 25-minute session – but I realize that learning can’t really
happen when I spoon feed what I would do with an assignment.
My least favorite part of the writing process is worrying if
what I am writing is understandable to people who aren’t me and worrying if
what I am writing is even worth understanding. My favorite part of the writing
process occurs on those (rare) occasions when I really hit a groove – when the
ideas begin to flow naturally from one to the other. I like revising completed
drafts because it feels like I’m progressing. As far as my students’ writing
process goes, I think the hardest part is getting them to commit to an
overarching argument. They have a lot of great, but disparate, ideas. I might
want them to go in one direction, but ultimately, they must make the choice
that is right for them.
I had a similar reaction when I was reading "Talk About Writing" -- it was encouraging to think that I am doing naturally what the book was examining, things like toggling between instructing and "pumping" questions, and using a sentence-level example to point out a global problem. It's comforting to think that all these terms we are learning is much more straightforward in practice. Also, "Overall, tutors used 31.16 strategies per 10 minutes of conference interaction." Woah! I guess I should pay more attention next time.
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