interdisciplinary studies of writing
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ABSTRACT
Interdisciplinary
Writing through Multidisciplinary Writing
Riv-Ellen Prell, Anthropology and American Studies
Amy Farrell and Halgren Kilde, Research Assistants
This study proposed to restructure the course, American Everyday
Life, by integrating writing assignments with course content and
encouraging students to write in a variety of genres which would
directly imitate the ones under study. Students were asked to
use reflective as well as critical and theoretical approaches
to the writing assignments. Writing was tied to a variety of research
designs: historical, ethnographic, and cultural and media criticism.
The class was designed to teach students how to integrate theory
with ordinary experience with the hope of deepening their ability
to read critically and to reason.
One of the more striking findings of the research occurred within
the first week of the course. Seventy-five students had enrolled
with five on a waiting list. After receiving the course syllabus
which outlined the writing requirements, students began a mass
exodus from the classroom. By the second week of the term, fewer
than thirty students remained in the class. Approximately sixty
students who had expressed interest in the class left when they
learned they would have to write papers, none of which were major
research papers, all of which were topical and lively. We learned
that writing is not a good way to attract students if one seeks
high enrollments. Students were less concerned about what they
had to produce than by the number of pages required. Short papers
were tolerated; papers of ten pages were extremely upsetting.
Throughout the term, students frequently questioned the need for
writing in a course that was not about composition.
We attempted to integrate writing into the class by devoting
one of every four class sessions to peer conferencing. Students
resisted showing others their drafts and expressed discomfort
with critiquing others' papers or asking others to comment on
their work. However, students were greatly appreciative of any
feedback they received on their drafts. Students wanted drafts
required, but they found the process of writing, reading, and
showing drafts to their peers very distressing.
We had also developed a questionnaire designed to elicit information
about students' perceptions of writing and themselves as writers.
We concluded that writing and attitudes about writing were closely
linked to how writing is presented and the frequency with which
it is required, that student authority is very much involved in
the process of self-evaluation about writing, that students are
more inclined to use passive than active strategies in their writing
processes, and that students have difficulty seeing themselves
as central to the writing process.
The first lesson that we learned from this challenging, exciting,
depressing, and thoroughly interesting project is that we will
never teach without assigning writing. However, we have also learned
that we must consider the nature of our assignments more carefully
for them to be effective. We concluded that it is better to require
a few papers and to incorporate more informal writing, particularly
short in-class papers and journals. We have also concluded that
to integrate theory and experience, writing and reasoning, requires
assigning less reading and using that reading more carefully,
covering less material to deepen understanding and engagement.
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