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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Morrissey, Thomas
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED379681
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author Morrissey, Thomas
author_facet Morrissey, Thomas
Morrissey, Thomas
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Writing and Learning across the Curriculum in the "Looking for America" Freshman Semester. Morrissey, Thomas American Studies College Freshmen Freshman Composition Higher Education Humanities Instructional Innovation Interdisciplinary Approach Portfolios (Background Materials) Student Needs Writing Across the Curriculum Writing Assignments In the fall of 1993, six faculty at SUNY Plattsburgh launched what they called the "Looking for America Freshman Semester," a program or course cluster of 16 credit hours in American studies, including anthropology, history, literature, philosophy, composition, and library skills. The core assumption underlying this effort was that writing is learning. Students in the program wrote about 30 papers of varying length during the semester, about 4 or 5 times what the average freshman writes. Curious to learn what students thought they had gained from their writing in the course cluster, one instructor asked his literature students to include in their portfolios the best essay they had written that semester--one not written for his class. Six of the students selected essays written in freshman composition; four of these were on personal topics having nothing to do with American studies. Three of the four expressed gratitude for the opportunity to write about personal topics. The two composition assignments that did relate to the American studies topic did so in surprising ways. One asked students to write about a personal experience with prejudice; the other asked for a short story which helped the student to understand writerly choices. This metacognitive experiment helped the instructor to appreciate the newness of cultural relativity from the perspective of a freshman, and to appreciate anew the importance of English 101. (TB)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED379681
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1995
record_format eric
spellingShingle Writing and Learning across the Curriculum in the "Looking for America" Freshman Semester.
Morrissey, Thomas
American Studies
College Freshmen
Freshman Composition
Higher Education
Humanities
Instructional Innovation
Interdisciplinary Approach
Portfolios (Background Materials)
Student Needs
Writing Across the Curriculum
Writing Assignments
Writing and Learning across the Curriculum in the "Looking for America" Freshman Semester. Morrissey, Thomas American Studies College Freshmen Freshman Composition Higher Education Humanities Instructional Innovation Interdisciplinary Approach Portfolios (Background Materials) Student Needs Writing Across the Curriculum Writing Assignments In the fall of 1993, six faculty at SUNY Plattsburgh launched what they called the "Looking for America Freshman Semester," a program or course cluster of 16 credit hours in American studies, including anthropology, history, literature, philosophy, composition, and library skills. The core assumption underlying this effort was that writing is learning. Students in the program wrote about 30 papers of varying length during the semester, about 4 or 5 times what the average freshman writes. Curious to learn what students thought they had gained from their writing in the course cluster, one instructor asked his literature students to include in their portfolios the best essay they had written that semester--one not written for his class. Six of the students selected essays written in freshman composition; four of these were on personal topics having nothing to do with American studies. Three of the four expressed gratitude for the opportunity to write about personal topics. The two composition assignments that did relate to the American studies topic did so in surprising ways. One asked students to write about a personal experience with prejudice; the other asked for a short story which helped the student to understand writerly choices. This metacognitive experiment helped the instructor to appreciate the newness of cultural relativity from the perspective of a freshman, and to appreciate anew the importance of English 101. (TB)
title Writing and Learning across the Curriculum in the "Looking for America" Freshman Semester.
topic American Studies
College Freshmen
Freshman Composition
Higher Education
Humanities
Instructional Innovation
Interdisciplinary Approach
Portfolios (Background Materials)
Student Needs
Writing Across the Curriculum
Writing Assignments
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED379681