interdisciplinary studies of writing
publications
ABSTRACT
Using
Intensive Writing-to-Learn as a Means of Reducing Limitations
on Learning in Large Classes
Ruth Thomas, Associate Professor, Vo-Tech Education
Debbykay Peterson, Research Assistant
This project seeks to explore the feasibility and effectiveness
of shifting from teaching with a heavy reliance on dialogue toward
emphasizing intensive writing-to-learn activities as class size
increases. In order for learning that is deep and lasting to occur,
students must have opportunities to be engaged in thinking about
and with the concepts they are learning and to connect them to
what is already familiar and to what is of personal interest and
import. Dialogue is a medium through which this kind of processing
of ideas can occur. Meaningful dialogue is more easily incorporated
in smaller classes than in larger ones. Because writing-to-learn,
like dialogue, provides the opportunity to be engaged in thinking
about and with the concepts that are being learned and to connect
students to what is already familiar and to what is of personal
interest and import, and because writing can be done with varying
degrees of independence, it has potential to serve functions in
large classes similar to those which dialogue serves well in smaller
classes.
The purpose of this project is to explore the incorporation of
intensive writing-to-learn in a course that is too large for in-class
dialogue to be the central medium for thinking. More specifically,
this project explores intensive writing-to-learn as a medium in
a large class for making students' own thoughts front and center,
for using content as hypotheses to be examined and critiqued,
for actively involving students in the learning process, for confronting
students with views that contradict their own, for ensuring deep
processing of concepts, for personalizing learning in a way that
can foster students' self-understanding and personal growth, and
for getting students to accept responsibility for directing their
own learning.
Six writing-to-learn approaches were identified that were consistent
with the above purpose. Guidelines for each approach were developed.
The 72 students in an upper division child psychology course on
relationships and development were given the opportunity to choose
one approach that they would use throughout the course. The reason
for asking students to continue to use the same approach was to
facilitate comparison of the students' work across time. Seven
writing assignments were required in addition to an essay final
examination. Students were also given the opportunity to do an
eighth assignment as extra credit, which most of them did. Students'
writing was responded to each week in a style that was intended
to reflect a teacher-as-collaborator role in which respectfulness,
acceptance, understanding, empathy, invitations to elaborate,
and requests for clarification characterized the responses. With
the students' permission, their writing assignments were duplicated
for later analysis.
Analysis is designed to reveal the degree to which each of the
following are reflected in the writing assignments: depth and
insight, a questioning and critical stance toward content, a stance
of being responsible for and directing one's own thinking and
learning, confronting and wrestling with and coming to terms with
views that are contradictory, deep processing of concepts, new
understandings that reflect a revision of prior views in a synthesis
of new information and prior knowledge, and reflection of feelings.
Implications of this project concern the depth of learning that
can be accomplished in large classes, relationships between the
nature of various writing-to-learn approaches and learning outcomes,
and practical concerns regarding the use of writing-to-learn in
large enrollment classes.
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