Beyond the word count

Using assignment sheets to promote genre awareness

Auteurs-es

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.31468/dwr.1041

Mots-clés :

assignment sheets, genre, genre awareness, student uptake

Résumé

Despite the best efforts of their instructors, first-year students often misinterpret or even ignore assignment sheets, leading to unmet learning outcomes and demoralising marks. Like academic writing as a whole, assignment sheets often contain conventions, terminology, and expectations that are unfamiliar to incoming undergraduates. In this paper, I propose an activity which calls students’ attention to assignment sheets as a genre, helping them meet the practical requirements of their assignment as well as develop their genre awareness. Students work in groups to rank the major goals of their current assignment as specified in the assignment sheet and use previous student responses to consider the diverse ways in which these goals can be fulfilled. Using this exercise, students can discover the close generic and rhetorical connection between the assignment sheet and the written responses it generates, as well as the variety of successful uptakes that are possible within the assigned genre.

Références

Bawarshi, A. S. (2003). Genre and the invention of the writer: Reconsidering the place of invention in composition. Utah State University Press. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt46nxp6

Bawarshi, A. S., & Reiff, M. J. (2010). Genre: An introduction to history, theory, research, and pedagogy. Parlor Press. https://wac.colostate.edu/books/referenceguides/bawarshi-reiff/

Bazerman, C. (2004). Speech acts, genres, and activity systems: How texts organize activity and people. In C. Bazerman & P. Prior (Eds.), What writing does and how it does it: An introduction to analyzing texts and textual practices (pp. 309-339). Lawrence Erlbaum. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781410609526

Clark, I. (2005). A genre approach to writing assignments. Composition Forum 14(2). https://www.compositionforum.com/issue/14.2/clark-genre-writing.php

Devitt, A., Reiff, M., & Bawarshi, A. (2004). Scenes of writing: Strategies for writing with genres. Longman. https://archive.org/details/scenesofwritings0000devi/page/44/mode/2up

Formo, D., & Neary, K. R. (2020). Threshold concepts and FYC writing prompts: Helping students discover composition’s common knowledge with(in) assignment sheets. Teaching English in the Two-Year College 47(4), 336-364. https://doi.org/10.58680/tetyc202030647

Freadman, A. (2002). Uptake. In R. M. Coe, L. Lingard, & T. Teslenko (Eds.), The rhetoric and ideology of genre: Strategies for stability and change (pp. 39-53). Hampton Press. https://doi.org/10.2307/4140672

Hardy, J. A., Römer, U., & Roberson, A. (2015). The power of relevant models: Using a corpus of student writing to introduce disciplinary practices in a first year composition course. Across the Disciplines 12(1), 1-22. https://doi.org/10.37514/ATD-J.2015.12.1.01

Hodgson, J. & Harris, A. (2013). “It is hard to know what you are being asked to do”: Deciphering codes, constructing schemas. English in Education 47(1), 6-17. https://doi.org/10.1111/eie.12001

Jankens, A. (2019). Learning how to ask writing questions with rhetorical reflections. Composition Forum 41, 1-25. https://www.compositionforum.com/issue/41/rhetorical-reflections.php

Johns, A. M. (2002). Destabilizing and enriching novice students’ genre theories. In A. Johns (Ed.), Genre in the classroom: Multiple perspectives (pp. 237-246). Lawrence Erlbaum. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0272263104250045

Tardy, C. M. (2017). The challenge of genre in the academic writing classroom. In J. Bitchener, N. Storch, & R. Wette (Eds.), Teaching writing for academic purposes to multilingual students: Instructional approaches (pp. 69-83). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315269665-5

Tardy, C. M., Buck, R. H., Jacobson, B., LaMance, R., Pawlowski, M., Slinkard, J. R., & Vogel, S. M. (2022). “It's complicated and nuanced”: Teaching genre awareness in English for general academic purposes. Journal of English for Academic Purposes 57, 1-13. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jeap.2022.101117

Wardle, E. (2009). “Mutt Genres” and the goal of FYC: Can we help students write the genres of the university? College Composition and Communication 60(4), 765-789. https://www.jstor.org/stable/40593429

Wardle, E., & Downs, D. (2023). Writing about Writing (5th ed.). Bedford/St. Martin’s. https://www.macmillanlearning.com/ed/uk/product/Writing-about-Writing--5th-edition/p/1319527981

Téléchargements

Publié-e

2024-09-27

Comment citer

Allen, K. (2024). Beyond the word count: Using assignment sheets to promote genre awareness. Discourse and Writing/Rédactologie, 34, 283–292. https://doi.org/10.31468/dwr.1041

Numéro

Rubrique

Writing in Practice