Saturday, 10 October 2015

"Engage in discussion about something that captured your attention over the past few weeks in the course. Relate it back to specific class discussions, readings, and your grading/teaching when possible."

I suppose that one concept that has continued to stick out to me in this class is the problem of addressing an audience and teaching students to do so in their writing. We began talking about “audience” by reading Ede and Lunsford and noting their most important questions: What does it mean to address an audience? How do we define audience? To what degree should teachers address/stress audience?
We mentioned in class on Friday that the notion of audience has fundamentally changed in the last ten years with growing globalization. In this regard, it is difficult for students to understand that a piece of writing can have a specific audience, as opposed to sending it into the “void.” I have to admit that I also struggle with the concept of audience, and I find that I relate to the students who cannot always grasp the significance of “audience.” My high school taught English through rhetorical analysis, and I have come to feel that this is the reason I never felt strong about English until college (where they taught English classes through literature). In college, I was rarely, if ever, told to pick out the author’s audience. We would dwell on audience so far as it meant to look at a work’s context—time period, political landscape, biographical information about the author and their relationship to the rest of the world, etc. However, audience was rarely the entire focus in our study of literature. Much more so, in literature, we focused on resurfacing themes in a piece. Literature became the study of a person’s mind and the ways that they chose to present it in writing.
For some reason, discussion of audience can sometimes seem unnatural to me, like going against the grain of what I feel the author was trying to do. Some authors don’t even know what they are doing as they write—they do not have an audience in mind, and their only concern in regards to audience is if their work will be understood by a reader. We discussed in class Mitchell and Taylor’s “General Model of Writing” and how it places far too much emphasis on the audience (even disregarding the author as a reader). With this model, writing becomes pandering to the masses rather than expression of the human mind. In class, we have discussed several times the idea of the author as the first reader. In addition, we talked about audience addressed vs. audience invoked. My main concern is that sometimes, the author is the only reader. Some authors do not set out to “inform” or to “persuade” (they may do so in the process of writing, but for many this is not a primary goal). Some authors just wish to toy with an idea. Some authors begin writing because they see a problem and wish to offer new perspectives on it, to provoke thought in anyone who will read their piece, including themselves (and yet, in our grading, if a student points out that the author’s audience could be anyone, we tell them they need to specify, specify, specify).

Specifically while grading, I have noticed that most students struggle to supply an answer to the concept of “audience.” After three assignments that each ask for the audience and purpose of the same three articles, most students still don’t get it. (Something is wrong when a class does an assignment three times and is still doing it wrong). I think that many students cannot see the higher purpose in picking out audience/purpose/rhetorical choices, because many times, starting that small in a work makes you feel like you are failing to see the greater significance of the work. Specifically within andragogy, I find it almost impossible to explain to an adult why it matters that they be able to pick out the rhetorical choices that Robert MacNeil, John Simon, and Douglas McGray make. When you sit down to learn about great literature and your teacher tells you to search for rhetorical choices in the work (and that’s all you’re allowed to write about), it is very easy to get frustrated with English. In teaching with such a strong emphasis on rhetorical choices, audience, and purpose, I find that Shaughnessy’s idea says it all:  the student “risks as little as possible on the page… producing written Anguish.” We have to allow for deviation in the formula, for other potential ways of seeing a piece to peek through. It’s so complicated, because I feel that it is necessary to be able to recognize rhetorical choices, as that contributes to one’s interpretation of major themes in the work. But for me, writing never “clicked” until I was allowed to discuss the themes that I perceived in the work, rather than being herded into a distinct formula for a certain type of paper. For this reason, I loved the model of GW’s program that Jessica presented on during Friday’s class. I hope that programs like this can become the basis for other composition programs, as they provide such a high degree of relevance for the students.

6 comments:

  1. Emma,

    Thank you for this! It's fascinating to hear about your struggle to connect with writing through rhetorical analysis; for me it's the exact opposite. High school courses focused on writing through the lens of literature, and I knew that while I liked to read it was really the writing itself that I was interested in. I found the rhetoric and professional writing program my first semester of undergrad and never looked back.

    For me, rhetorical analysis provides a way to understand writing effectively as an author, but it also allows me to understand deeper purposes as a reader. I fell in love with Kenneth Burke's pentad for dramatism - actor (or agent), act, agency, scene, and purpose - because it made me feel like a detective in a television show: identify all these pieces and the mystery unfolds.

    I think of very little writing as having no intended purpose or audience. However, I understand how some writing is a means of releasing an idea with no specific care to direction or force. I think of my journal that no one but myself is intended to read: am I, then, the audience? (I do directly address Past and Future Aubrey...but that's probably too much information).

    I'll be thinking more about this. I hope you don't write off rhetorical analysis just yet! ;)

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    1. Aubrey, thank you for your insight! I think it is so intriguing to hear about the many different ways that people become fascinated with English (yet another reminder of how we need to learn to be unbelievably accommodating to students with different modes of interest and understanding). And don't you worry, I will be sure not to write off rhetorical analysis over these next few years--I'm still learning! Thanks!

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  2. So, for me I think one way to look at is it to turn it around on the students. It's important for them to understand when they write knowing who their audience is in order to know how to write to that audience effectively. I think that we have them learn this so that they can see how to effectively write to an audience. If they can learn to do this then it will help them. But, I think that the students should be allowed to pick an article from their field or just of their choosing. This would make it easier to appeal to our students. Especially when dealing with andragogy, these students need to feel relevant and I think we would get much more out of them if they could choose their own article. You are on to something here and I think we should begin discussing this more in class, honestly.

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  3. Thorough post, Emma. Nice work. You've latched on to perhaps the most significant issue in composition and rhetoric--creating and defining and writing for a real audience. Everything is audience-based. Something I like in intro to technical communication courses, oftentimes, is doing what we call an "audience and use profile." It's an assignment where students are asked to deconstruct everything they know about the given audience, including ways they may best receive information, what they already know, etc. For me that's missing in composition--and it's everything. Can't persuade if you don't know to whom you're writing.

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    1. ELS went good! I think it was a good refresher for the students that we presented to. At the start, I felt a bit like we were wasting their time--one of the more advanced students told me several times, "We already know this! We went over this weeks ago," and he looked somewhat bored. However, many of the other students seemed to be working hard to refresh their knowledge. We had a bit of discussion devoted to why composition will be important to them in each of their chosen fields. Overall, I think it went well for the students, and it was very good practice for me getting in front of a classroom (Meghan's already a pro!).

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