Efficient Ways to Improve Student Writing
Strategies, Ideas, and Recommendations from the faculty Development Literature
View the improvement of students’ writing as your responsibility.
Teaching
writing is not only the job of the English department alone. Writing
is an essential tool for learning a discipline and helping students
improve their writing skills is a responsibility for all faculty.
Let students know that you value good writing.
Stress
the importance of clear, thoughtful writing. Faculty who tell students
that good writing will be rewarded and poor writing will be penalized
receive better essays than instructors who don't make such demands. In
the syllabus, on the first day, and throughout the term, remind students
that they must make their best effort in expressing themselves on
paper. Back up your statements with comments on early assignments that
show you really mean it, and your students will respond.
Regularly assign brief writing exercises in your classes.
To
vary the pace of a lecture course, ask students to write a few minutes
during class. Some mixture of in-class writing, outside writing
assignments, and exams with open-ended questions will give students the
practice they need to improve their skills.
Provide guidance throughout the writing process.
After
you have made the assignment, discuss the value of outlines and notes,
explain how to select and narrow a topic, and critique the first draft,
define plagiarism as well.
Don't feel as though you have to read and grade every piece of your students' writing.
Ask
students to analyze each other's work during class, or ask them to
critique their work in small groups. Students will learn that they are
writing in order to think more clearly, not obtain a grade. Keep in
mind, you can collect students' papers and skim their work.
Find other faculty members who are trying to use writing more effectively in their courses.
Pool
ideas about ways in which writing can help students learn more about
the subject matter. See if there is sufficient interest in your
discipline to warrant drawing up guidelines. Students welcome handouts
that give them specific instructions on how to write papers for a
particular course or in a particular subject area.
Teaching Writing When You Are Not an English Teacher
Remind students that writing is a process that helps us clarify ideas.
Tell
students that writing is a way of learning, not an end in itself. Also
let them know that writing is a complicated, messy, nonlinear process
filled with false starts. Help them to identify the writer's key
activities:
Developing ideas
Finding a focus and a thesis
Composing a draft
Getting feedback and comments from others
Revising the draft by expanding ideas, clarifying meaning, reorganizing
Editing
Presenting the finished work to readers
Explain that writing is hard work.
Share
with your class your own struggles in grappling with difficult topics.
If they know that writing takes effort, they won't be discouraged by
their own pace or progress. One faculty member shared with students
their notebook that contained the chronology of one of his published
articles: first ideas, successive drafts, submitted manuscript,
reviewers' suggested changes, revised version, galley proofs, and
published article.
Give students opportunities to talk about their writing.
Students
need to talk about papers in progress so that they can formulate their
thoughts, generate ideas, and focus their topics. Take five or ten
minutes of class time for students to read their writing to each other
in small groups or pairs. It's important for students to hear what their
peers have written.
Encourage students to revise their work.
Provide
formal steps for revision by asking students to submit first drafts of
papers for your review or for peer critique. You can also give your
students the option of revising and rewriting one assignment during the
semester for a higher grade. Faculty report that 10 to 40 percent of the
students take advantage of this option.
Explain thesis statements.
A
thesis statement makes an assertion about some issue. A common student
problem is to write papers that present overviews of facts with no
thesis statement or that have a diffuse thesis statement.
Stress clarity and specificity.
The more the abstract and difficult the topic, the more concrete the
student's language should be. Inflated language and academic jargon
camouflage rather than clarify their point.
Explain the importance of grammar and sentence structure, as well as content.
Students
shouldn't think that English teachers are the only judges of grammar
and style. Tell your students that you will be looking at both quality
of their writing and the content.
Distribute bibliographies and tip sheets on good writing practices.
Check with your English department or writing center to identify
materials that can be easily distributed to students. Consider giving
your students a bibliography of writing guides, for example:
Crews, F.C. Random House Handbook. (6th ed.) New York: McGraw-Hill, 1992.
A classic comprehensive textbook for college students. Well written and well worth reading.
Lanham, R.A. Revising Prose. (3rd ed.) New York: Scribner's, 1991. Techniques for eliminating
bureaucratese and restoring energy to tired prose.
Tollefson, S. K. Grammar Grams and Grammar Grams II. New York: HarperCollins, 1989,
1992. Two short, witty guides that answer common questions about grammar, style, and usage. Both are fun to read.
Science and Engineering
Barrass,
R. Scientists Must Write. New York: Chapman and Hall, 1978. Biddle, A.
W., and Bean, D. J. Writer's Guide: Life Sciences. Lexington, Mass.:
Heath, 1987.
Arts and Humanities
Barnet, S. A Short Guide to
Writing About Art. Boston: Little, Brown, 1989. Goldman, B. Reading and
Writing in the Arts. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1978.
Social Sciences
Biddle, A. W., Fulwiler, T., and Holland, K.M. Writer's Guide: Psychology. Lexington, Mass,:
Heath, 1987.
McCloskey, D. N. The Writing of Economics. New York: Macmillan, 1987.
Ask a composition instructor to give a presentation to your students.
Invite
a guest speaker from the composition department or student learning
center to talk to your students about effective writing and common
writing problems. Faculty who have invited these experts report that
such presentations reinforce the values of the importance of writing.
Let students know about available tutoring services.
Individual
or group tutoring in writing is available on most campuses. Ask someone
from the tutoring center to give a demonstration in your class.
Use computers to help students write better.
Locally
developed and commercially available software are now being used by
faculty to help students plan, write, and revise their written work.
Some software available allows instructors to monitor students' work in
progress and lets students collaborate with their classmates.
Assigning In-Class Writing Activities
Ask students to write what they know about a topic before you discuss it.
Ask
your students to write a brief summary of what they already know or
what opinions they hold regarding the subject you are about to discuss.
The purpose of this is to focus the students' attention, there is no
need to collect the summaries.
Ask students to respond in writing to questions you pose during class.
Prior
to class starting, list two or three short-answer questions on the
board and ask your students to write down their responses. Your
questions might call for a review of material you have already discussed
or recalling information from assigned readings.
Ask students to write from a pro or con position.
When
presenting an argument, stop and ask your students to write down all
the reasons and evidence they can think of that supports one side or the
other. These statements can be used as the basis for discussion.
During class, pause for a three-minute write.
Periodically
ask students to write freely for three minutes on a specific question
or topic. They should write whatever pops into their mind without
worrying about grammar, spelling, phrasing, or organization. This kind
of free writing, according to writing experts, helps students synthesize
diverse ideas and identify points they may not understand. There is no
need to collect these exercises.
Have students write a brief summary at the end of class.
At
the end of the class period, give your students index cards to jot down
the key themes, major points, or general principles of the day's
discussion. You can easily collect the index cards and review them to
see whether the class understood the discussion.
Have one student keep minutes to be read at the next class meeting.
By
taking minutes, students get a chance to develop their listening,
synthesizing, and writing skills. Boris (1983) suggests the following:
Prepare
your students by having everyone take careful notes for the class
period, go home and rework them into minutes, and hand them in for
comments. It can be the students' discretion whether the minutes are in
outline or narrative form.
Decide on one to two good models to read or distribute to the class.
At the beginning of each of the following classes, assign one student to take minutes for the period.
Give
a piece of carbon paper to the student who is taking minutes so that
you can have a rough copy. The student then takes the original home and
revises it in time to read it aloud at the next class meeting.
After
the student has read their minutes, ask other students to comment on
their accuracy and quality. If necessary, the student will revise the
minutes and turn in two copies, one for grading and one for your files.
Structure small group discussion around a writing task.
For
example, have your students pick three words that are of major
importance to the day's session. Ask your class to write freely for two
to three minutes on just one of the words. Next, give the students five
to ten minutes to meet in groups to share what they have written and
generate questions to ask in class.
Use peer response groups.
Divide
your class into groups of three or four, no larger. Ask your students
to bring to class enough copies of a rough draft of a paper for each
person in their group. Give your students guidelines for critiquing the
drafts. In any response task, the most important step is for the reader
to note the part of the paper that is the strongest and describe to the
writer why it worked so well. The following instructions can also be
given to the reader:
State the main point of the paper in a single sentence
List the major subtopics
Identify confusing sections of the paper
Decide whether each section of the paper has enough detail, evidence, and information
Indicate whether the paper's points follow one another in sequence
Judge the appropriateness of the opening and concluding paragraphs
Identify the strengths of the paper
Written critiques done as homework are likely to be more thoughtful, but critiques may also be done during the class period.
Use read-around groups.
Read-around
groups are a technique used with short assignments (two to four pages)
which allows everyone to read everyone else's paper. Divide the class
into groups no larger than four students and divide the papers (coded
for anonymity) into as many sets as there are groups. Give each group a
set and ask the students to read each paper silently and decide on the
best paper in the set. Each group should discuss their choices and come
to a consensus on the best paper. The paper's code number is recorded by
the group, and the same process is repeated with a new set of papers.
After all the groups have read all the sets of papers, someone from each
group writes on the board the code number from the best paper in each
set. The recurring numbers are circled. Generally, one to three papers
stand out.
Ask students to identify the characteristics of effective writing.
After
completing the read-around activity, ask your students to reconsider
those papers which were voted as excellent by the entire class and to
write down features that made each paper outstanding. Write their
comments on the board, asking for elaboration and probing vague
generalities. In pairs, the students discuss the comments on the board
and try to put them into categories such as organization, awareness of
audience, thoroughness of detail, etc. You might need to help your
students arrange the characteristics into meaningful categories.
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