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This page contains four
specific areas:
Creating
Effective Assignments
Checking
the Assignment
Sequencing
Writing Assignments
Selecting
an Effective Writing Assignment Format
Creating
Effective Assignments
Research has shown that
the more detailed a writing assignment is, the better the student
papers are in response to that assignment. Instructors can often
help students write more effective papers by giving students written
instructions about that assignment. Explicit descriptions of assignments
on the syllabus or on an "assignment sheet" tend to produce the
best results. These instructions might make explicit the process
or steps necessary to complete the assignment. Assignment sheets
should detail the kind of writing expected, the scope of acceptable
subject matter, the length requirements, formatting requirements,
documentation format, the amount and type of research expected (if
any), the writer's role, and deadlines for the first draft and its
revision.
Providing questions or
needed data in the assignment helps students get started. For instance,
some questions can suggest a mode of organization to the students.
Other questions might suggest a procedure to follow. The questions
posed should require that students assert a thesis.
The following areas should
help you create effective writing assignments.
Examining
your goals for the assignment
- How exactly does this
assignment fit with the objectives of your course?
- Should this assignment
relate only to the class and the texts for the class, or should
it also relate to the world beyond the classroom?
- What do you want the
students to learn or experience from this writing assignment?
- Should this assignment
be an individual or a collaborative effort?
- What do you want students
to show you in this assignment? To demonstrate mastery of concepts
or texts? To demonstrate logical and critical thinking? To develop
an original idea? To learn and demonstrate the procedures, practices,
and tools of your field of study?
Defining
the writing task
- Is the assignment
sequenced so that students: (1) write a draft, (2) receive feedback
(from you, fellow students, or staff members at the Writing and
Communication Center), and (3) then revise it? Such a procedure
has been proven to accomplish at least two goals: it improves
the student's writing and it discourages plagiarism.
- Does the assignment
include so many sub-questions that students will be confused about
the major issue they should examine? Can you give more guidance
about what the paper's main focus should be? Can you reduce the
number of sub-questions?
- What is the purpose
of the assignment (e.g., review knowledge already learned, find
additional information, synthesize research, examine a new hypothesis)?
Making the purpose(s) of the assignment explicit helps students
write the kind of paper you want.
- What is the required
form (e.g., expository essay, lab report, memo, business report)?
- What mode is required
for the assignment (e.g., description, narration, analysis, persuasion,
a combination of two or more of these)?
Defining
the audience for the paper
- Can you define a hypothetical
audience to help students determine which concepts to define and
explain? When students write only to the instructor, they may
assume that little, if anything, requires explanation. Defining
the whole class as the intended audience will clarify this issue
for students.
- What is the probable
attitude of the intended readers toward the topic itself? Toward
the student writer's thesis? Toward the student writer?
- What is the probable
educational and economic background of the intended readers?
Defining
the writer's role
- Can you make explicit
what persona you wish the students to assume? For example, a very
effective role for student writers is that of a "professional
in training" who uses the assumptions, the perspective, and the
conceptual tools of the discipline.
Defining
your evaluative criteria
- If possible, explain
the relative weight in grading assigned to the quality of writing
and the assignment's content:
- depth of coverage
- organization
- focus
- critical thinking
- original thinking
- use of research
- logical demonstration
- appropriate mode
of structure and analysis (e.g., comparison, argument)
- format
- correct use of
sources
- grammar and mechanics
- professional tone
- correct use of
course-specific concepts and terms.
Checking
the Assignment
Here's a checklist for
writing assignments:
- Have you used explicit
command words in your instructions (e.g., "compare and contrast"
and "explain" are more explicit than "explore" or "consider")?
The more explicit the command words, the better chance the students
will write the type of paper you wish.
- Does the assignment
suggest a topic, thesis, and format? Should it?
- Have you told students
the kind of audience they are addressing -- the level of knowledge
they can assume the readers have and your particular preferences
(e.g., "avoid slang, use the first-person sparingly")?
- If the assignment
has several stages of completion, have you made the various deadlines
clear? Is your policy on due dates clear?
- Have you presented
the assignment in a manageable form? For instance, a 5-page assignment
sheet for a 1-page paper may overwhelm students. Similarly, a
1-sentence assignment for a 25-page paper may offer insufficient
guidance.
Sequencing
Writing Assignments
There are several benefits
of sequencing writing assignments:
- Sequencing provides
a sense of coherence for the course.
- This approach helps
students see progress and purpose in their work rather than seeing
the writing assignments as separate exercises.
- It encourages complexity
through sustained attention, revision, and consideration of multiple
perspectives.
- If you have only one
large paper due near the end of the course, you might create a
sequence of smaller assignments leading up to and providing a
foundation for that larger paper (e.g., proposal of the topic,
an annotated bibliography, a summary of the paper's key argument,
a first draft of the paper itself). This approach allows you to
give students guidance and also discourages plagiarism.
- It mirrors the approach
to written work in many professions.
The concept of sequencing
writing assignments also allows for a wide range of options in creating
the assignment.
Use
the writing process itself.
In its simplest form, "sequencing an assignment" can mean establishing
some sort of "official" check of the prewriting and drafting steps
in the writing process. This step guarantees that students will
not write the whole paper in one sitting and also gives students
more time to let their ideas develop. This check might be something
as informal as having students work on their prewriting or draft
for a few minutes at the end of class. Or it might be something
more formal such as collecting the prewriting and giving a few suggestions
and comments.
Have students submit
drafts. You might ask students to submit a first draft in order
to receive your quick responses to its content, or have them submit
written questions about the content and scope of their projects
after they have completed their first draft.
Establish small groups.
Set up small writing groups of three-five students from the class.
Allow them to meet for a few minutes in class or have them arrange
a meeting outside of class to comment constructively on each other's
drafts. The students do not need to be writing on the same topic.
Require consultations.
Have students consult with someone in the Writing and Communication
Center about their prewriting and/or drafts. The Center has yellow
forms that we can give to students to inform you that such a visit
was made.
Explore a subject
in increasingly complex ways. A series of reading and writing
assignments may be linked by the same subject matter or topic. Students
encounter new perspectives and competing ideas with each new reading,
and thus must evaluate and balance various views and adopt a position
that considers the various points of view.
Change modes of discourse.
In this approach, students' assignments move from less complex to
more complex modes of discourse (e.g., from expressive to analytic
to argumentative; or from lab report to position paper to research
article).
Change audiences.
In this approach, students create drafts for different audiences,
moving from personal to public (e.g., from self-reflection to an
audience of peers to an audience of specialists). Each change would
require different tasks and more extensive knowledge.
Change perspective
through time. In this approach, students might write a statement
of their understanding of a subject or issue at the beginning of
a course and then return at the end of the semester to write an
analysis of that original stance in the light of the experiences
and knowledge gained in the course.
Use a natural sequence.
A different approach to sequencing is to create a series of assignments
culminating in a final writing project. In scientific and technical
writing, for example, students could write a proposal requesting
approval of a particular topic. The next assignment might be a progress
report (or a series of progress reports), and the final assignment
could be the report or document itself. For humanities and social
science courses, students might write a proposal requesting approval
of a particular topic, then hand in an annotated bibliography, and
then a draft, and then the final version of the paper.
Have students submit
sections. A variation of the previous approach is to have students
submit various sections of their final document throughout the semester
(e.g., their bibliography, review of the literature, methods section).
Selecting
an Effective Writing Assignment Format
In addition to the standard
essay and report formats, several other formats exist that might
give students a different slant on the course material or allow
them to use slightly different writing skills. Here are some suggestions:
Journals. Journals
have become a popular format in recent years for courses that require
some writing. In-class journal entries can spark discussions
and reveal gaps in students' understanding of the material. Having
students write an in-class entry summarizing the material covered
that day can aid the learning process and also reveal concepts that
require more elaboration. Out-of-class entries involve
short summaries or analyses of texts, or are a testing ground for
ideas for student papers and reports. Although journals may seem
to add a huge burden for instructors to correct, in fact many instructors
either spot-check journals (looking at a few particular key entries)
or grade them based on the number of entries completed. Journals
are usually not graded for their prose style.
Letters. Students
can define and defend a position on an issue in a letter written
to someone in authority. They can also explain a concept or a process
to someone in need of that particular information. They can write
a letter to a friend explaining their concerns about an upcoming
paper assignment or explaining their ideas for an upcoming paper
assignment. If you wish to add a creative element to the writing
assignment, you might have students adopt the persona of an important
person discussed in your course (e.g., an historical figure) and
write a letter explaining his/her actions, process, or theory to
an interested person (e.g., "pretend that you are John Wilkes Booth
and write a letter to the Congress justifying your assassination
of Abraham Lincoln," or "pretend you are Henry VIII writing to Thomas
More explaining your break from the Catholic Church").
Editorials. Students
can define and defend a position on a controversial issue in the
format of an editorial for the campus or local newspaper or for
a national journal.
Cases. Students
might create a case study particular to the course's subject matter.
Position Papers.
Students can define and defend a position, perhaps as a preliminary
step in the creation of a formal research paper or essay.
Imitation of a Text.
Students can create a new document "in the style of" a particular
writer (e.g., "Create a government document the way Woody Allen
might write it" or "Write your own 'Modest Proposal' about a modern
issue").
Instruction Manuals.
Students write a step-by-step explanation of a process.
Dialogues. Students
create a dialogue between two major figures studied in which they
not only reveal those people's theories or thoughts but also explore
areas of possible disagreement (e.g., "Write a dialogue between
Claude Monet and Jackson Pollock about the nature and uses of art").
Collaborative projects.
Students work together to create such works as reports, questions,
and critiques.
To discuss any of these
formats or to explore other ways of adding a writing component to
your classes, please contact the Writing Center's director (Steve
Strang, 253-4459, smstrang@mit.edu).
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