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Tuesday, May 7, 2019

Navigating Writing-Intensive Courses as a Student | radical eyes for equity

Navigating Writing-Intensive Courses as a Student | radical eyes for equity

Navigating Writing-Intensive Courses as a Student


Teaching writing as part of a course, or the primary focus of a course, is especially challenging for teachers. Managing a workshop approach and surviving the paper load are demanding elements when teaching writing and not simply assigning writing as part of the course assessment.
However, we less often acknowledge that writing-intensive courses that require students to participate in workshop environments, submit multiple drafts of major writing assignments, and navigate different expectations for student behavior and assessment are also challenging and even paralyzing for students.
Both assessment elements grounded in process and product as well as the structures of the workshop approach present students with expectations unlike traditional courses driven by tests and transmissional classroom structures (lecture, discussion).
Writing-intensive courses tend to approach assessment differently than traditional class-based one-session testing. Writing assessment includes, then, feedback on products (essays), meaning that the assessment is integral during the learning not simply something that occurs after the learning.
In writing-intensive courses, instruction and assessment are integrated, but students may also experience multiple rounds of assessment (feedback) and even multiple grades on the same product since several drafts are being submitted for teacher response and/or grades.
Along with the holistic nature of instruction and assessment, writing-intensive courses tend to require that students meet deadlines, submit CONTINUE READING: Navigating Writing-Intensive Courses as a Student | radical eyes for equity