| |
|
|
On
Learning to Write Well
It
may come as a surprise that many students who are otherwise highly
qualified for Yale arrive with serious writing problems. Computers
seem to be compounding the situation, which has given new urgency
to the way the College deals with it.
Summer
1996
by Annie Murphy Paul
A recent
graduate of Yale who now makes her living as a journalist remembers
her first experiences as a high school writer:
"My teachers loved everything I produced," she says. "I
couldn't do anything wrong." Their glowing recommendations
helped boost her into Yale, but when she handed in her first college
paper, she received an unexpected response. "I got a B minus!"
she says, still indignant at the memory.
Her experience is not
uncommon among the first-year students who arrive at Yale every
fall. Although the high school prodigies and newly-minted valedictorians
who fill the ranks of the freshman classes are invariably intelligent
and accomplished, "that doesn't necessarily mean they can write,"
says English professor Caroline Rody.
This is hardly news.
Before he became Yale's 19th President, A. Bartlett Giamatti (then
a professor of English and comparative literature) wrote in this
magazine that too many Yale students "cannot handle English -- cannot
make a sentence or paragraph, cannot organize a paper, cannot follow
through -- well enough to do college work." Since then, things
may have gotten worse. Langdon Hammer, director of undergraduate
studies in English, says that there has been "a real decline
in writing standards" among students just entering the University.
Two decades ago, Giamatti
contended that student writing skills had been bankrupted by the
hedonistic, "sentimental" culture of the 1960s, a culture,
he said, that preferred emotion and sensation to disciplined thought.
The "purveyors of mush," as Giamatti called Abbie Hoffman,
Kahlil Gibran, and Kurt Vonnegut, might today be identified as the
computer and the television set. Raised not on literature but on
the flashing images and fragmented speech of electronic media, students
are less familiar with written language, less accustomed to its
subtle rhythms and rigorous demands. In the eyes of many faculty
members, the colloquial style favored by users of e-mail and the
Internet has atrophied some undergraduates' formal vocabulary and
syntax. And equipped with machines that will check their spelling
and grammar, then spotlessly laser-print their copy, a few students
may be tempted to think their computers can actually write their
papers for them.
A nobler strain of 1960s
idealism may also be responsible for the shift in literacy skills
of entering students. Since the presidency of Kingman Brewster,
Yale has sought to attract a student body that was ethnically, geographically,
and socially diverse. As Brewster's ambitions have been realized,
the wider range of educational backgrounds that undergraduates now
bring to the College has created new dilemmas for teachers of writing.
Their students' training is not as uniform and predictable, and
in some cases is not as thorough or demanding, as that of the preparatory
school graduates who once swelled Yale classrooms. Over the past
30 years, the University has also begun to recruit increasing numbers
of international students
(the College enrolled 259 this year) for whom writing presents the
additional difficulties of expression in a foreign tongue. Even
among American students, there are some who speak English as a second
language.
That
Yale now has a rich selection of programs to address such needs
is due in large part to Giamatti,
who as a professor and then as President helped to secure funding
for the Yale College Committee on Expository Writing. This group,
made up of both faculty and administrators, met for the first time
in the spring of 1979, and subsequently rejected many of the measures
that other universities have used to promote student literacy: instituting
a writing requirement, creating a writing center, or appointing
a full-time director of composition. Instead, the Yale committee
chose a more directed approach, designing specific programs to give
students one-on-one attention, to improve their basic composition
skills, and to promote good writing across the curriculum. When
the committee's original grant, from the Pew Charitable Trusts,
ran out in 1983, the Bass Family Fund (among other patrons) stepped
in to make the initiative, since renamed the Bass Writing Program,
a permanent fixture of College life.
The committee's innovations
have flourished in the 18 years since they were introduced, and
are now a model for many other institutions across the land. Yale,
for example, was one of the first universities to use professional
writers and editors, rather than writing teachers or even college-student
peers, as tutors. The Bass program has placed one of these tutors,
who is available ten hours or more a week, in each of Yale's residential
colleges. Ready to help students with their writing at any stage,
from brainstorming about topics to proofreading a final draft, the
tutors can attend to problems that are all but impossible to address
in the clamor of a lecture class.
Paula Resch, the writing
tutor in Ezra Stiles, describes her role as that of a mentor or
coach, "a tutor in the old sense of the word": a teacher
who works closely with individual students, helping them identify
problems in their writing and find ways to solve them. Tutors may
go line-by-line through students' work, or they may engage the student
in a more general discussion of a paper's strengths and weaknesses.
Before he graduated
in May, Juan Alcala had been going to Resch since his first semester
at Yale. Alcala says that Resch helped him to write more concisely,
use shorter sentences, and avoid overstating his points. Alcala
says Resch even eased him over writer's block. "Sometimes I'd
be stuck, just reading the same sentences over and over," says
Alcala. "It really helped to have her read it and give me her
comments."
Although tutors bring
different kinds of experience to the job -- as fiction writers, reporters,
magazine journalists, experts on argument and rhetoric -- they share
some common principles. Writing is a process, not a product, they
say: it's a set of skills, a way of thinking about and responding
to the world. A crucial part of this process is revision: reading
one's own work with what tutors call "a writer's eye,"
alert to the fine points of diction and syntax (not to mention grammar
and punctuation). Once students know the rules of language, say
tutors, they can use them to their own ends, developing a distinctive
personal style or "voice." Says Melissa Weissberg, the
Jonathan Edwards writing tutor: "Students often ask me, 'Can
I do that?' I tell them, 'It's your paper, you can do whatever you
want.' That's a very liberating idea to them."
Often,
however, undergraduates' basic writing skills are not strong enough
to permit such sophisticated experimentation.
"I'm shocked at the level of preparation some of these kids
are coming in with," says Weissberg. "Students will say
to me, 'I didn't learn any grammar in school,' or 'Teachers told
me not to bother with that.' I have to emphasize things they should
have known since elementary school." Such deficiencies are
all the more critical in college, where papers are assigned more
frequently than in high school, are longer in length, and require
more sophisticated analysis. They often entail original research,
which must be properly documented. And college writing assignments
may ask of students things they've never done before: a close reading,
a lab report, a literature review.
Confronted with such
unfamiliar demands, many students are understandably anxious. Writing
tutors say that the students they see most frequently are freshmen
worried about their ability to handle college work, and upperclassmen
embarking on senior essays, a year-long project that can run to
50 pages or more. These groups are usually joined by a few whose
confidence has been rattled by Yale's exacting standards. "We
see students when they're nervous -- or when they haven't been nervous
enough," says Betsy Sledge, one of the Bass program's three
senior tutors.
Undergraduates who need
practice in writing at the university level may sign up for "Reading
and Writing Prose," an English class funded by the Bass Program.
Paula Carlson directs the twelve sections of the course, which last
fall enrolled 256 students. "This is a transitional class,"
says Carlson. "It builds on the skills that students already
have, getting them ready to write college papers." Freshmen
with less-than-spectacular verbal test scores are encouraged to
take the class before proceeding to the study of literature. Two
additional English classes form a bridge to the department's more
advanced courses: "Introductory Seminars in Writing and Literature"
and "Introduction to Literary Study."
These beginning English
classes require frequent -- often weekly -- writing assignments, which,
after they are turned in, are then substantially revised and resubmitted.
Students meet often with professors to discuss their work. "The
faculty who teach these classes spend a lot of time responding to
student papers," says Caroline Rody, who directs one of the
introductory classes. "We think of our comments not as criticism,
but as invitations to a dialogue about how the paper can be made
better." The workshop format of the classes encourages students
to read and critique their fellow students' work, improving their
editing skills and giving them a sense of where they stand among
their peers.
One section of the beginning
English courses, subtitled "Writing Across the University,"
addresses what is perhaps the most daunting challenge facing the
new college student: learning to write in the language of various
academic disciplines, each of which may have a distinct style, a
particular sense of audience, and a specialized vocabulary. "I
invite professors from different departments at Yale into the class
to explain what defines academic prose in their field," says
Kathleen Pfeiffer, who taught the class this year. "Then I
give the students assignments that are as close as possible to the
sort of papers they would write in those disciplines" -- essays
which may analyze a novel, a history text, a psychology study, or
a painting at the Art Gallery.
Developing
writing skills across the curriculum was the idea behind another
of the Bass Program's initiatives:
the creation of "writing intensive" sections of lecture
classes. These sections are limited to 15 students, and are taught
by a teaching assistant (or "T.A."), usually a graduate
student specially
trained in writing instruction. Section members have frequent writing
and revising assignments, regular conferences with their teaching
assistant, and sometimes write a long paper in place of an exam.
Like writing tutors, the T.A.'s who teach these sections must often
help students with the nuts and bolts of good writing. Lori Rotskoff
taught a writing intensive section of "Women in America: The
Twentieth Century," a history class. "I had one student
who wrote entirely in the passive voice," says Rotskoff. "I
showed her that by using strong, active verbs, she could immediately
make her argument much more persuasive."
At other times, writing
intensive T.A.'s help educate their students in the conventions
of a discipline. Dean Bechard, a graduate student in religious studies,
taught a writing intensive section of "New Testament History
and Literature" last spring. "Religious studies employs
a method of reading and interpreting religious texts that is quite
strange to students new to the field," says Bechard. "Instead
of simply looking at how others have responded to those texts, the
assignments allow students to practice thinking and writing in the
manner of a religious-studies scholar."
This year, writing intensive
sections were offered in nine departments, including political science,
sociology, chemistry, and humanities. In addition, some departments
devote a special seminar especially to the writing demands of their
discipline. Robin Winks, chair of the history department, has taught
"The Writing of History" for 13 years. "Discussions
of writing in the abstract don't do much good," says Winks.
"Students need to see how the challenges of being a historian
are translated into issues of writing." Those issues, he says,
include how to write history that is "interesting, memorable,
and factually accurate," and how to "embed analysis in
graceful, compelling narrative."
In addition
to supporting projects that focus on basic compositional skills,
the Bass Writing Program also funds "Daily Themes,"
a rigorous course that has become an almost legendary component
of the Yale curriculum. Intended for accomplished undergraduate
writers, the class, which requires a page of writing each day, five
days a week, was begun in 1907 by Assistant Professor of English
C.S. Baldwin, and quickly became a Yale institution. It disappeared
for two years in the late 1970s, however, and was revived in 1979
by Sterling Professor of English
John Hollander. He says that the unique structure of the course
-- daily assignments, weekly lectures, and weekly meetings with
a tutor -- made it worth saving. "Having to hand in something
every day makes writing a habit, not a special occasion, as when
a paper is due," says Hollander.
When Hollander returned
"Daily Themes" to the Yale curriculum, he changed its
focus from personal expression, occasionally fictionalized, to expository
writing. There is a small group of classes offered by the English
department, however, to those student writers with a creative bent.
These advanced English courses -- in the writing of fiction, nonfiction,
plays, and verse -- are supplemented by workshops that are offered
through the residential college seminar program. Often taught by
professional writers, the college seminars give students an even
wider choice of genres; in recent years, the program has presented
classes on autobiography, investigative journalism, and screenplay
writing. Admission to all these classes is highly competitive, and
those selected are among Yale's most skilled and serious writers.
Students themselves
often complain that the University doesn't offer enough of these
"creative writing" courses. But English professors respond
that the limited number of such classes, as well as Yale's lack
of a creative writing major, is a deliberate decision on the part
of the department. "Our view is that after a student has taken
a few writing courses, the best way to become a better writer is
to read more," says Langdon Hammer. Some aspects of writing,
he suggests, may simply lie outside the purview of the classroom.
John Crowley, who teaches "The Craft of Fiction," is himself
a novelist and short story writer. "Humor, passion, understanding -- all
the things we read books for -- that has to come from the writer himself,"
says Crowley. "We can teach students craft and technique, but
if we could teach the rest of it, we'd have to call it a class in
wisdom, not writing."
|
|