[Next week, a
new semester begins; so this week, I’ll preview five classes and other aspects
of that semester, this time through the lens of teaching and working in the age
of Trump. Leading up to a special weekend post on book talks and plans!]
On the challenge
of controversial content in a skills-focused writing course.
As I wrote about
in this
article for Teaching American Literature,
I’ve always tried to practice a student-centered pedagogy, one where my central
emphasis is more on helping develop student voices and skills rather than on
any particular readings or content. While (as that article indicates) I’ve
adjusted the balance between skills and content somewhat in my literature
survey courses and upper-level literature seminars over the years, I haven’t
done so much at all in my first-year writing courses (Fitchburg State has a
two-part sequence, Writing I and Writing II). After all, these are courses that
every incoming student at Fitchburg State is required to take in or around his
or her first year, and that thus have the vital role of introducing not only a
number of different types and forms of writing, but also related academic
skills such as critical reading and thinking, individual and group
communication, research and information literacy, and more. While of course I
use particular texts and content in these courses, I see and treat those
readings and topics explicitly as a means to help move students closer to the courses’
particular academic ends.
That perspective
is going to be challenged a bit this spring, however. I’ll be teaching for the
second time my
Writing II syllabus on Analyzing 21st Century Identities, and in
a class that kicks off only a few days before the presidential inauguration, I’m
not sure whether or how we’ll be able to avoid discussing all things Trump as
part of that topic. When I taught my English
Studies Senior Seminar on Analyzing 21st Century America this
past fall, of course we talked about the election and related topics; but that
was a class that included a through-line
of #BlackLivesMatter readings and units on such topics as climate change
and immigration (among many others), so political connections and discussions
were a planned part of the class dynamic in any case. Whereas, again, my
choices of readings and content for the Writing II course are designed more to
introduce assignments and lenses (such as personal narratives of digital
identities or contextual analyses of multimedia texts) that can help the
students develop different writing and academic skills, rather than ones that
lend themselves organically to political topics and debates. Yet how can we
talk day in and day out about 2017 American identities and texts without
engaging those political questions?
I don’t know
that we can, and I’m certainly not going to stop any discussion that moves from
our readings and topics to those political questions (although I’ll try to make
sure that we remain analytical and evidence-based as we do so). Indeed, I think
there could be great value in thinking about (for example) how the themes and
lenses provided by our first unit, on advertising and marketing, might help us
analyze politics and society in the age of Trump. And the last, most open-ended
unit, where students research and write an interdisciplinary multi-textual
analysis of a topic of their choice, will undoubtedly produce some political
topics. But that’s precisely my goal, and the way to keep my student-centered
emphasis despite such inevitable content connections: allowing student ideas and
voices to lead to our political conversations (or not, if they don’t), rather
than foregrounding those issues myself. Despite nonsensical
fears about professors “brainwashing” or “indoctrinating”
students, our goal is always to help them make those kinds of connections
themselves, to see how they can apply critical reading and thinking to (when
appropriate, as it certainly will be in this course) contemporary and political
topics and debates. So if this Writing II class will present a new teaching
challenge along those lines, it’s one to which I’ll be happy to respond.
Next preview
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Spring plans you’d highlight or share?
Wondering if professors of math have such difficulties...
ReplyDeleteA fair question! I think each discipline will have its own relationship to our current moment, but certainly not the same one as what I'm highlighting here.
DeleteBen