Monday, August 4, 2008

"I"

After class today, Nikki asked me if you are allowed to use the first-person singular pronoun "I" in your posts. It is a great question because I know that many writing teachers prohibit the use of this word in formal writing. And, since I made clear that your posts must be formal, I can certainly understand why the question arose. The easy answer is, of course you can use "I." And, tomorrow in class, I want to discuss the relationship between a formal paper and this curious pronoun.

Remember that by 8:00 pm tonight, you need to have your own blog, email me the url, and post a short reflection on your relationship to blogging and to writing in general. A colleague with whom I often collaborate drew my attention to this article which may help you get started with your first post. Feel free to write a brief response to the question of the "I" when you discuss your relationship to writing and blogging.

Also, this same colleague taught an advanced composition course in summer session I with blogs--much of his experience and experiments have inspired my ideas for our class. Please see one of his early posts on what constitutes a good blog. I think you'll find it useful and again, these are all topics we'll take up in class this week and beyond.

Pedagogy

For my first "official" post, outside of the syllabus, I want to write about my pedagogy, or my method and practice of teaching. I mentioned some of this in class today, but as we situate ourselves between paper and machine in this class, I think your knowing something about my relationship to teaching is important.

In my classroom—no matter the subject—I work with students to engage with language differently. I am very committed to drawing from their own literacies and, in the process, I help them become aware that they in fact have a discourse and critical vocabulary—essentially, their own repertoire of keywords that they use daily and often effortlessly. I realize that some instructors feel it is important to keep abreast of what they think students are interested in, television shows, music, media forms, and so on. I have never taken this approach and instead I always remain mindful that I could never predict—nor would I want to try—what students “like” or spend their time doing outside of the classroom. Instead, my own research interests and experiences largely inform my courses. And yet, my pedagogy and research are closely aligned in a way that also balances the unique positionalities of each student and each classroom.

In general, I have an interest in emerging media forms and the residual ideological, social and political effects they have in their cultural emergence. In the last several months, I have noticed that many people, including highly respected academics, are using blogs to write anything from their daily thoughts to critical essay-like productions. I haven’t known what to make of this cultural and even scholarly shift, so I have decided to utilize the space of the classroom and the power of 26 minds over 1 to think through this media form. With this course, and to a certain extent with each course I have taught, I allow for productive failures and the opportunity to rethink the plan I set forth. Again, the students are an integral part of this reshaping and I have had to learn to account for those who prefer a more passive position in the classroom. My experimental approaches are at times met with resistance and frustration from the students and, therefore, I have learned to absorb these moments as well and transform them into something productive. For example, I have introduced new media practices in the classroom and then quickly experienced those moments in which technology all too often fails, both technically and conceptually. I use these moments to discuss what it means when technology, which increasingly has an aura of infallibility in Western culture, fails.

Therefore, the students and I always confront the problem or frustration at hand and most often, this relies on my ability to faciliate such a discussion in which everyone feels comfortable speaking, even if their opinion is unpopular or controversial. This facilitation style requires incredible confidence on my part, which I have had to cultivate—and will continue to do so—over several years. Finally, my pedagogy relies on a certain transparency with my students: they know the syllabus is reworkable, that I certainly do not know the answers to every question, and that there is no distinct line between teacher and student in my classroom. On this last point, I have spent six years focusing on how such a lack of distinction does not create disarray and disrespect toward me or other students; this is not a simple task and, as I said, such a pedagogical style requires confidence and a willingness to spend time learning the intricate dynamics of a classroom community.

Sunday, August 3, 2008

Syllabus

Course Description

In this course, we will approach the act of writing through the medium of a blog. In other words, all of our papers will be virtual, that is, written as blog entries. There will be no paper exchanged. One of the main reasons for this is that I want each of you to have more than the instructor as your audience. I believe firmly that better writing happens when the writer knows her or his work will be read, and evaluated, by others. In this case, your audience will be your peers in class and anyone who finds your blog online. I want to make very clear at the outset: my standards for writing in this course will be no less rigorous than they would be if we were exchanging white paper. We will approach the act of writing as seriously as we would if we were writing on paper. Therefore, another reason for using the blog is for us to think critically about the very medium of the blog itself. For example, we will periodically ask the following questions: how does it feel to compose a paper virtually? How does it feel to read and evaluate a virtual paper, or blog? How are these acts different than white paper?

Much of the course will be devoted to discussions and writing about technology and media forms, from the 19th century dagurreotype to social networking sites. I do not expect you to have extensive knowledge about technology, but you must have an interest in it. Throughout the course, we will not be analyzing the technology of technology, so to speak, but rather the social, cultural and political constitutions of it. In other words, we will not write or analyze html code, for example, but we may think about the very notion of a code and how it functions in the everyday.

Schedule and Assignments


There will be some paper in the course, I suppose, if you consider the text
New Keywords I have asked you to purchase. This text will help us build a critical vocabulary. By Sunday at 12:00 pm each week, I will post four keywords from our text you must read for the week. I will also post other short articles and possibly blogs for you to read and be prepared to discuss in class for the week. Here are the keywords for this week: technology, virtual, media, writing. By Tuesday, arrive having read the following article from the NY Times. Be ready to discuss it and write your first blog entry on it this week. We will discuss the logistics of signing up for your own blog on the first day of class, but if you want to do so before then, you must use Google’s Blogger. You can name the blog anything you’d like, but the username must include at least your first name and last initial.

Other than the mandatory reading for each week, each of you will post one blog per week and one extensive comment on a peer’s blog. On the first day of class, we will create two main groups, A & B and starting next week, we will establish a solidified schedule in which group A will post their blogs by Wednesday at 4:00 pm, group B will comment on these by Thursday at 4:00; group B will then post their blog by Friday at 4:00 and group A will comment by Saturday at 4:00. Then, the next week, group B will post first, and so on.

If this sounds confusing, don’t worry because we’ll go over it together on the first day. However, that this course is experimental and very different from other writing courses you will encounter on this campus is probably already clear to you. If you like more traditional structures and organization, please find another section of UWP 1. To be in this course, you must accept that we will change the schedule and methods along the way. Finally, you must be willing to share your writing with the rest of the class and be open to the comments you receive in return.

Grading

Blogs: 10% each (6 total)
Final exam: 25 %
Participation (includes attendance, in class discussion, comments): 15%


*Attendance is mandatory; if you miss more than 2 class meetings, your grade will be significantly affected.