Social Class Reproduction

Four Rules for Teaching Writing:
Image result for image: joy of writing
Always give writing assignments that

1. you will enjoy reading;
2. students will enjoy writing;
3. students will enjoy reading what others in the class have written
4. you will enjoy writing.

If any one of these conditions were not true, then it probably wasn't a very good assignment.

Advice I give to my students: When your words surprise you, you know you are writing.

Sunday, March 27, 2016

Thought Experiment

I am not linking this thought game to the more disciplined projects of philosophers, physicists, or Einstein, but I want to imagine heterodox notions of required writing programs in post-secondary institutions. I may be repeating Crowley's 1991 article, "A Personal Essay," but I want to play out my own thoughts here, occasioned, as usual, by conversations with friends who think I'm a bit off.

I assume, following Marx, Durkheim, Berger and Luckman, Bourdieu, and a host of others, that cultures try to reproduce themselves in part through the institutions they contain. Educational institutions are certainly dominant in social reproduction.

So, obviously, is language within the educational project. I'm going to skip the intermediate steps in this thought experiment to get to our required writing programs.

Imagine "college level" writing/language/thinking as a part of the social reproduction project--and of course of required writing programs that may very well exist primarily to haul in profits by requiring courses farmed out to part-time rather than full-time teachers (the excuses for this are legend and more than a little leaky).

But let's say that most people can write well enough to satisfy the exigence of the particular rhetorical situation. If we can ignore concerns like comma splices, split infinitives, subject-verb agreement, and so on, most of which exist only in order to mark one's social class and schooling, most people can write messages that can be adequately interpreted to convey the necessary message.

I--as I assume do other writing program directors--have multiple examples of essays graduate students have brought to me in frustration, saying they couldn't understand them, when if read aloud, the text was perfectly understandable if you ignored the spelling, grammar, and punctuation errors (see Williams, "Phenomenology").

Here's the thought experiment: suppose we accept all writings samples as normative. Suppose we resist the social reproduction agenda of gatekeeping and certifying through the reductive mechanisms of grades, obviously privileging the middle classes who have by and large defined the norms in their own images. What would our writing classes look like?

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