Workshop and Critiquing Guidelines
Workshops are useful for readers and writers: both learn more about the possibilities of writing while honing their critical thinking skills. Our workshops are designed to accomplish these aims:
|
enlightenment |
helping writers see how others see their writing |
|
assistance |
gaining new strategies, suggestions, perspectives |
|
prioritizing |
distinguishing important concerns from minor ones |
|
practice offering constructive criticism |
learning tact may be useful in some academic and professional endeavors |
|
practice receiving criticism |
learning tact may be useful in some academic and professional endeavors |
To establish a group
Come prepared with 3-4 copies of your draft. If your draft is longer than five pages, select out or mark a five-page section for particular attention. If you'd like help with specific aspects, write a note explaining the desired focus, and copy it with the drafts.
On the fated day, distribute copies to your group. Everyone should write comments on each draft and be prepared to discuss them on the workshop day.
To critique a draft
Comments can be descriptive, prescriptive, or both. Descriptive comments offer the writer information about reader reactions, including comments and questions; prescriptive comments suggest what the writer should do.
Examples of descriptive comments:
Examples of prescriptive comments:
In order to comment most effectively….
course materials to help you focus on key aspects.
To discuss drafts
Apportion the time available in class, so everyone's work can be discussed, or arrange to meet outside of class to continue discussion. Each writer's work is discussed in turn, so apportion the workshop time accordingly. For each writer’s work,
Commentators: Consider your comments within the framework of the workshop aims: you can't cover everything, so help the writer understand what's most important. Don't worry about being wrong; the responsibility of what to do with your comments rests with the writer. Don't apologize for correcting the writer; think about the value of constructive
criticism, and get to work.
Writers: Practice nodding, smiling, and making muffled sounds of vague encouragement. When your work is being discussed, listen and take notes on your copy. You can ask questions, but don't argue with your critics: if they offer valid criticisms, smile, thank them, and do what they suggest; if they are misguided, hopeless fools, smile, thank them, and completely ignore what they say.