Friday, May 20, 2011

7 Things That Reveal a Bad Writing Teacher

The recent press release by Newt Gingrich (or his press secretary, hard to tell really) has made me eager to share what I know about teaching writing. Someone with a college education wrote that press release--the possibility that it was a professional writer, someone who went to college in order to be trained to write, chills me to the bone. No one is obliged to be a brilliant writer--the very attempt to be a "brilliant writer" is deeply misguided--but everyone with an education is obliged to avoid being a painfully bad writer. Absolutely obliged. Now, my Ph.D. in Composition/Rhetoric/Literacy hasn't conferred on me any real wisdom but what it has given me is the narrow, specific knowledge of how to teach writing. Perhaps more importantly, it has taught me how not to teach writing. So, for what it's worth, here's the absolute truth about it.

7 Things That Reveal a Bad Writing Teacher

1. You are given "worksheets" of any kind. This includes computer software of any kind. Though it is possible that worksheets for the invention process could be helpful in generating ideas and creative thinking, such worksheets would be presented as strictly optional and in a spirit of levity. The day you, as a student, are given a worksheet that is meant to "teach" you something or to "exercise" a "skill," drop the class and get as much of your money back as you can. Writing can't be taught like that--it's probable that nothing really can be. The idea that writing can be distilled into "skills" is, in itself, a dead give-away that what you have at the head of the class is a trained grade-school teacher and not a university-level professional.


2. Your work is returned to you with line-by-line corrections. This is the mark of a teacher with a need to demonstrate his/her technical knowledge at the expense of students' learning. Any teacher who wastes his/her own time doing such a labor-intensive thing when it's absolutely certain not to help the student learn, is either psychologically messed up or completely uninformed. Either way, run.


3. First drafts are returned with technical errors marked. See the explanation for #2--it's exactly the same. The teacher who does this is in the wrong profession. S/he should have become a copy editor, not a writing teacher. As such, I promise you, this teacher only loves the students who don't need help. (If you are a student who believes s/he doesn't need help anyway, you're probably unteachable. I'm trowing that little nugget in here as a lagniappe. You're welcome.)


4. You are required to write only a first draft and a final draft. This is probably a sign that your teacher has too many students to teach properly. This is not the teacher's fault but it is a sign that you don't want this class--probably this school. A teacher who doesn't require you to play with multiple ways of working a piece is either over-worked or uninformed--there is not a third possibility. Get out of that class if at all possible. Your time and money would be better spent reading well-written books--an activity which is, by the way, the only thing all good writers have in common.


5. You are encouraged to use a thesaurus. Good writing is not done this way. Using a thesaurus is a great way to make your writing sound contrived and is an invitation to the worst thing that can happen to a writer: being unintentionally funny. However, a good writer makes ample use of a dictionary to be sure his/her natural vocabulary is truly under the writer's control. If your writing teacher doesn't know this, something is very wrong.


6. Class time is spent generalizing about writing. The only conversation that will actually help you learn about writing is one that is about an actual piece of writing. The only generalization that can be made about all writing is that all good writing is an appropriate response to a specific context. Without a complete understanding of the context and the expectations appropriate to that situation, a piece of writing can't be properly judged. So, if the teacher brings you a reading and wants you to discuss the subject matter of that reading rather than the choices available to its writer, your time is being wasted. This teacher wants to teach literature or social science, or whatever the content of the readings happens to be. Go find someone who wants to teach writing.


7. Student writing is never shared with the rest of the class. Because of the points I just made in # 6, discussing the writing done by the students in the class is the most efficient use of class time. It has multiple benefits to both student and teacher. The teacher who does not make the students' writing the topic of discussion is probably guilty of #2 and #3 as well. Again, this is someone with a psychological need to be an authority, not a teacher. This person is getting his/her payoff by standing at the front of the room, not by seeing you progress. This is a person who should have gone into acting or who has no training as a writing teacher--bad for you either way.

16 comments:

D Magady said...

I really enjoyed reading this! So what are the 7 things that reveal a good writing teacher?

Bridget Cowlishaw said...

Damn fine question, sir! But, it's a much harder list to compile because there are many different ways of being a good teacher even though most bad teachers fall into some senseless stereotypical nonsense. BUt I think I could generate a list....Thanks for the challenge!

Nancy said...

Love this. I just finished a three-day workshop with faculty from across the curriculum at the college where I have taught for 23 years. The purpose was to help them learn how to integrate writing into their courses so they could be designated as "writing intensive." I'm going to share your blog with them!

Steven W. Hopkins said...

I am ashamed at how many of these things I do. I am reading this at the perfect time to make changes to my syllabus for my summer class. Thanks.

Bridget Cowlishaw said...

@Nancy: Very cool. Thanks.I taught Composition Pedagogy for 12 years but felt like a lone voice crying in the wilderness. I should have been blogging.

Bridget Cowlishaw said...

@Steven: Goodness gracious, don't feel shame! As i used to tell my writing students, "It will be interesting to see what choices you make in your revision." :)

Ryan said...

Mostly I agree, with the exception of #5. Students should be encouraged to use the thesaurus as a function of trying on new words and new ways of thinking. They should use the thesaurus in conjunction with a dictionary, and they should expect their teacher to help them realize when they've used a new word incorrectly or inappropriately. That said, it should never be the focus of teaching--only a resource for students who feel capable and supported to experiment with.

Don Hudson said...

I was in the classroom for 28.5 years. I'm proud to say the last 15 of those years I never did any of the 7 deadly sins of writing. However, to be honest, I'm guilty as hell of the 7 deadly sins for the first 13.5 years of my career. During those dark times I knew I was doing something wrong but I didn't know what. I did what my training and my leadership told me to do but it didn't work. I assumed I was the problem and in some ways I was. Two things saved my career and my sanity - The National Writing Project summer institute at the University of Wisconsin and Bread Loaf School of English at Middlebury college VT. Imagine being one of a dozen graduate students in the classrooms of James Britton, Nancy Martin, James Moffett, Ken Macrorie, Peter Elbow, Nanci Atwell, John Elder, and Dixie Goswami?
The problem today is the people who know what to do are not allowed to do it. They are not allowed to teach writing they must teach to the standardized test. And Newt and all his ilk don't get it.
Money for education needs to be untied from politics and economics -separation of state and school! That is, of course, if we really want to preserve our democracy.

Bridget Cowlishaw said...

Ryan, I would say that new vocabulary is best learned the natural way: by exposure to new words used appropriately in context. This is, perhaps, something I should have connected in my 7: #4 is related to #5 in that reading good writing will always expand a student's vocabulary.

As far as I can tell, a thesaurus is good for browsing if you're a word junky and many of us in this field are. However, for a student who does not have anything like a love affair with words, the obligation to use a thesaurus can add another daunting layer of mystification to writing.

Bridget Cowlishaw said...

Don, holy smokes, you've been to the promised land! I hear you about teaching to tests. When I taught graduate classes in Composition Pedagogy 1998-2010), many of my students were teaching in public high schools and I learned a great deal about how they were prevented from implementing anything they learned in my class. Now, I'm afraid, colleges and universities are very quickly conforming to the same model "outcomes-based" model of teaching and learning. (My dark predictions are in this post: http://mytruthexperiment.blogspot.com/2011/04/losing-my-religion.html) Very depressing.

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