Wednesday, August 09, 2006

Teachers's Working Schedule, so far as it goes...

Working Schedule: Foundations of Verbal Communication I & II, 2006-07
Fall 2006: FVC 101

September
(Note to instructors: M/W classes begin wk 1 on 6 ix 06, and the academic week is W/M, not M/W, until the time of Thanksgiving Break. This is a pain in the ass, but it is the way the schedule works. Lobby for a later start to the semester by one week and a full week Thanksgiving break to remove this onus, which does not effect T/Th and W/F)
You may want to assign the oral presentations for October as soon as you have a stable roster; see below (under "October", of all things).


wk 1: 5 ix 06 Tu Introductions
Six Questions: Have students write out on one side of an index card three questions they would use in "interviewing" fellow students in an introductory setting; have them label these "student"; on the other side of the same card, have them write out three questions they would use in "interviewing" an instructor in the same context; have them label these "instructor". Collect and shuffle the cards, and use the questions to interview students later in the session; have students ask other students’s questions of me. Briefly discuss the differences between the two sets of questions. This is an ice-breaker for the course, but also an introduction to the differences between oral and written communication, the rhetorical situation as applied to different audiences, interviewing format, and the need for good handwriting as well as good projection and enunciation.
Blog Introduction or Pen Pal Letter and Obituary: Have students write an informal self-introduction. Then, have them write an obituary for themselves – as though they died today (i.e. this is to be factual, not a fantasy of a rich life as the next Dali, dying sometime in the 22nd century); this is to be formal. Collect both exercises for your own information (make copies and return the originals). This exercise should go together with "Six Questions"; it helps students to focus on how they wish to present themselves, and illustrates the distinction between informal and formal writing, so well as they can make that distinction at this point.
Distribute and have students read (aloud) the course syllabus.
Assignment for next class session: read Faigley 2-6; Tolkien 100-120 ("Leaf by Niggle"; for comparison with Balzac’s "Unknown Masterpiece").

7 ix 06 Th Introductions, continued; the rhetorical situation; the three purposes for verbal communication identified in Faigley (20,21): continue to interview students using the exercises from last class. Discuss the rhetorical situation, presenting the rhetorical triangle and the terms pathos, ethos, and logos (Faigley presents them in this order, but hardly uses them after the first chapter. If you are happy with the Greek terms and will use them consistently afterwards, use them in class; if they are uncomfortable to you, I think I would just skip them entirely and use English circumlocutions). Discuss the three purposes for verbal communication identified in Faigley (20,21), and ask the students to identify which of these they may have used thus far in the course – and whether the syllabus represents anything different. (Probably, the students’s presentations have been only reflective [their questions and pen-pal letters or blog introductions] or informative [answers and obituaries]; they may argue that these are persuasive; ask them to show in what way this is so. The syllabus is certainly informative, but perhaps also persuasive.)
Assignment for next class session: Faigley 7-21.

wk 2: 12 ix 06 Tu: Words, Images, and Graphics; Marking Texts
Handout on marking texts (underlining, preparing marginal notes, etc.); sample text marking
Assignment for next class session: Faigley 22-36; Orwell, "Why" 1-10.

14 ix 06 Th: Discuss whether Orwell’s essay "Why I Write" could be presented non-verbally. Reflective writing exercise: Compose a short essay responding to the questions: Why do you engage in the artistic work you do? In what way is your motivation for your artwork like Orwell’s motivation to write? When your work is not the best, why do you think that is?
Instruct students in the art of composing an essay from questions without merely answering the questions. The questions should be restated and included in the response, so that anyone reading the essay knows what is happening in the essay.
Collect the essays and make two copies of each for future use.
As an instructor, you may wish to look at chapter 8 in Faigley. My experience of working with this chapter last year was a living Hell which I do not wish to repeat, but it seems to me that there may be some redeeming material here. If you had a different experience, perhaps you can share that with me and give me some pointers. Reflective writing is supposed to be a major element of our curriculum; "reflective writing" is a hot buzz-phrase with MSCHE, and so we should try to make some accommodation to it. I’m surprised how on the one hand students are very happy to provide autobiography at the wrong times and how on the other they resist thinking about themselves and recording that experience. Perhaps it’s too much like therapy.
Assignment for next class session: Tolkien 100-120 ("Leaf by Niggle"; for comparison with Balzac’s "Unknown Masterpiece".

wk 3: 19 ix 06 Tu: Writing Essay Examinations; Planning and Drafting; Comparative essay on "The Unknown Masterpiece" and "Leaf by Niggle"
The students have now written several short pieces. Now it is time to consider the frequent role of writing in college: essay examinations. Review Faigley 827-831 in class; have students read sections out loud and discuss. This also brings students to physically open to the back of the book; point out the glossary, the index, and the section on grammar, as well as the revision guide and "list of common errors" in the flyleaf. Have students dog-ear or otherwise mark the sections for frequent use.
In his chapter on "Planning and Drafting" (38-62), Faigley presents similar information: in "establishing goals" he talks about key words in assignments, and how those key words may be used to define topics.
Note how Tolkien presents his topics, but not his conclusions or "theses" about fiction on page 33.
Define topic versus thesis; discuss ways of developing a topic, and how to develop a thesis from the topic.
This differs from year to year and some section to section, but some students have difficulty in generating topics. My own theory is that once one has a topic and knows something about it, the creation of a thesis and of a workable outline from the same is a fairly mechanical matter.
As an exercise in the learning just presented, take an established topic – a comparison of "The Unknown Masterpiece" and "Leaf by Niggle" and generate a series of sub-topics which can be further predicated to create theses.
Use "The Unknown Masterpiece" and "Leaf By Niggle" as the basis for a comparison ("compare and contrast" – although technically contrast is a kind of comparison) essay which can then be taken through the stages of structuring and revision.
Schedule about half of the class session for drafting of a brief essay comparing these short stories.
Assignment for next class session: Faigley 38-62; Tolkien 33 (as example of topic and thesis).
Like most of the assignments in the first half of this course, the readings assigned here have already been examined in class; asking the students to read them afterward allows them to find more detail than was experienced in the initial presentation. It is also useful to assign material which will be discussed before the discussion, and you will see below that I do this as well.

21 ix 06 Th Composing Paragraphs: Examples from Orwell’s "The Lion and the Unicorn" and "Politics and the English Language".
Assignment for students: Faigley enumerates seven types of paragraphs; you will prepare a brief oral presentation on one type of paragraph (as assigned) and also compose an example of the paragraph style as part of the larger essay on Balzac and Tolkien. These will be presented in class next time.
Faigley enumerates seven types of paragraphs; assign one type to each of the students and have them each prepare notes for a brief oral presentation on the type of paragraph and also compose an example of the paragraph style as part of the larger essay on Balzac and Tolkien. These will be presented in class next time. Have rubrics ready to assess the oral presentations! Collect the paragraphs and copy for the files. Have students work in small groups to rewrite the paragraphs using the strategies from 75-85.
Assignment for next class session: Faigley 63-86.

wk 4: 26 ix Tu Continue to work on redrafting the comparative essay using Faigley’s instructions (75-93). Submit reworked draft.
Assignment for next class session: Faigley 87-92.

Of course, the first part of the class session will be spent on the oral presentations of paragraph styles. That should take about forty minutes all told. Beyond that, this class period and the next are essentially student work days during the class session. I am available to assist, but fundamentally students should be working on their own. I would suggest reviewing the instructions in Faigley and preparing a rubric from them, so that the students have a kind of checklist for their work. This is crude and mechanical, but there is a technical side to writing which shouldn’t be denied.
Speaking of the technical side of writing, one of the curious features of the student course evaluations every semester is the set of four questions at the bottom of the evaluation dealing with, amongst other matters, critical thinking and development of technical capacity. Since, as we know, many of our students perceive the College as a trade school, their notion of "technical" is often limited to their major field of study. By using the term "technical" here, and by using it frequently to refer to operations within verbal communications, it is just possible that we will start to have more useful scoring in the year-end reviews, rather than the mark of "not applicable" for "helped me to improve my technical capacities" for a course in study skills, listening, speaking, reading, and writing!


28 ix 06 Th Reviewing other students’s work (using Faigley 93-102). Submit drafts with comments.
Assignment for next class session: Faigley 93-102.

Here again, I think a translation of the three-part process advocated by Faigley on pages 93-102 into a rubric or check-list students can use in preparing their reviews would speed the process along. Distribute copies of students’s work collected after the last session, or make copies for distribution at the beginning of this class period. If you have the unhappy situation of an odd number of students, do the review yourself for one of the students, and make two copies of one students’s work to be reviewed to give to the "odd" student. I hope that last is clear.
The essays reviewed have already been graded as draft revisions; what is to be assessed of the material submitted today is not the student writers’s work, but the student reviewers’s. This must be evaluated quickly so that the reviewed essays may be returned to the writers for further revision.


October
Beginning the 10th of October, we will experience a series of oral presentations on material from Faigley 514-578. Assignments are to be made in the first week of October. Each student will be responsible for the material in one section in Faigley; the presentations will be scored on the basic of informational accuracy, clarity of organization, projection and enunciation, and so on. I distribute rubrics for the presentations when I make the assignments.

The sections I have in mind for oral presentation are as follows:
1. Write with power: Action words; verbs; name agents – Faigley 514-522.
2. Write with power: Vary your sentences; project personality – 522-525.
3. Write concisely: Eliminate unnecessary words; reduce wordy phrases – 526-531.
4. Write concisely: simplify tangled sentences – 532-534.
5. Write with emphasis: Manage emphasis in sentence; forge links across sentences – 535-540.
6. Write with emphasis: Use parallel structure with parallel ideas; use parallels in lists; use parallels in paragraphs – 541-545.
7. Find the right words: Recognize varieties of English; be aware of levels of formality – 546-553.
8. Find the right words: Be aware of denotation & connotation; use specific language; use effective figurative language – 553-563.
9. Write to be inclusive: Be aware of stereotypes; be inclusive about gender, race, ethnicity, & other differences – 564-572.
10. Write for diverse audiences: Understand English as a global language; respect differences in language and culture – 573-577.
11. Write for diverse audiences – Use accessible language – 577-578.


This only gives 11 students oral presentations, without repetition. Repetition would not necessarily be bad, but I want to keep the presentations moderately fresh, so here are some other presentations that I would be inclined to make at some point but students could do.

1. Subject-verb agreement: Faigley 615-629.
2. Fragments, run-ons, and comma-splices: 602-614.
3. Quotation marks: 737-746.
4. Punctuation other than quotation marks: 747-760.
5. Capitalization and italics: 774-781.
6. Abbreviations, acronyms, and numbers: 783-790.

These, of course, will take some time to present each day – perhaps ten minutes. I suggest not more than two a day, although you will have to consider how to fit them all into the schedule. Generally speaking, such presentations are not much longer than three minutes – they might go as long as five. You will need to be familiar with the material presented yourself to assess the substantive content, but probably a half sheet of notes would cover what is needed – or you could refer to the text. What I would like the students to do is to go beyond the words of the textbook, to grasp the concepts for themselves, and to present them cogently and clearly. I am concerned not only that the students presenting have an experience of public speaking and the rest of the students have an experience of listening, but that the material from the text is presented without me being the lecturer.

wk 5: 3 x 06 Tu: Critical Reading and Viewing; Fallacies
Assignment for next class session: Faigley 104-116; Orwell, "Why" 102-120; Using the reviews of your work, prepare a final draft of your essay comparing the Balzac and Tolkien short stories.

Hopefully, you will have evaluated (graded) the material submitted the last class session, and can return it – in this session, examine the problems of faulty thinking and consider how examples thereof may be corrected.

Faigley gives a fine introduction to fallacies; I have also prepared handouts on fallacies which I would be willing to share if I can locate them. Irving Copi’s Logic (or in later editions Introduction to Logic; also his Informal Logic) provides an excellent resource for the study of fallacies; I have several editions in the Liberal Arts office. The specialists on the business of fallacies are logicians, and one should not hesitate to turn to textbooks on logic for information about fallacies. However, one caveat: like any specialists, logicians have made the study of the specialty so detailed as to be daunting to the uninitiated. What one must look for are the broad classes of fallacies, rather than the particular varieties. But do cover all the basic classes. Orwell’s analysis of writing faults in "Politics and the English Language" is brilliant; notably, it parallels the analysis of Strunk and White in Elements of Style.



5 x 06 Th: submit final draft of comparative essay; Analysis:
Questions for rhetorical analysis applied to Orwell, "Why I Write" and "Politics and the English Language".
The questions here alluded to are on 119-120 of Faigley. This is an excellent opportunity to discuss the distinction between an historical understanding of rhetorical analysis and a "reader-response" approach. For example, to answer the second batch of questions, "Who is the audience?" the respondent must have some notion of the social and political context of England in the 1930s or ‘40s. But the audience (readers) of Orwell’s writing are also American recent high-school graduates in 2006: what is their experience of reading Orwell. Do not allow the students to concentrate only on their own experience, however. They will do that anyway. Try to get them to think about what is required to understand Orwell in context, that is, in his own historical present. Don’t just hand them the answer (i.e. no need for a period-long lecture on the details of the decline of the Empire under George VI); have them consider how the answer may be constructed – facilitate their own research. This may be excruciating painful for all involved, but so be it.
Assignment for next class session: Faigley 117-132.

wk 6: 10 x 06 Tu: Close Reading of a Text: Tolkien’s "On Fairy-Stories"; How to create study guides; Listen, prepare notes on talks.
Assignment for next class session: Tolkien 33-57 (OFS, sections 1 and 2).
I will be using the first two sections of Tolkien’s seminal essay as the illustrative matter of a talk on note-taking, marking of texts, and the creation of study guides. Many students have commented on the difficulty of reading this essay (originally a lecture); some of the difficulty is the language, some is the subject matter, some is the structure, and some is the original intended audience (specialists in folk-literary studies in the 1930s in the UK), to which the contemporary American college student has little connection. I think the essay is so important to an understanding of art and language in general, of the role of imagination in art, and of the characteristic literary form of the 20th century (science fiction), that I am retaining the essay as part of the course over and against frequent and loud student protest, but I am taking away the onus of students interpreting it completely on their own. I am, instead, explaining the text while also demonstrating appropriate ("proper") marking of texts and construction of study guides.
The business of creation of study guides is a special fascination of mine. I could say that I am a specialist on the creation of study guides, although I would not claim to be an "expert" in the matter. Still, I have made quite a few. My approach as an instructor is slightly different than that which a student should take. I will present the theory and practice in a separate posting on this blog.
Taking notes of a lecture or talk is another matter of serious importance. I think very few people have training in the business, but I am convinced that there is great profit in having such training part of our foundational program. I will, again, outline my thoughts in another posting.
I will be requiring students to present their notes to me for comment and evaluation; Pawel Kozielski also requires his students to turn in their notebooks once or twice a semester. What we should plan on doing is removing some of this burden from subject-instructors, teaching and enforcing the method in foundations, and thus increasing the accuracy and clarity of notes in the subject-courses.


12 x 06 Th: Close Reading of a Text: The Value and Function of Fiction; Listen, prepare notes on talks.
Assignment for next class session: Tolkien 57-75 (OFS, sections 3 and 4).
Tolkien’s essay is specifically about "fairy-stories", but in a broader sense his argument is applicable to fiction in general, and indeed to art as a whole. He is particularly concerned with the value and function of imaginative ("fantasy") writing. It is unfortunate that the label "fantasy" has been taken up to describe a certain, limited genre of fiction, and it does not help students’s comprehension of Tolkien’s critical thesis that Tolkien is viewed – quite correctly – as the prime mover of the contemporary "fantasy" literature scene. Students who object to Tolkien (and to "fantasy") on the grounds of their current popularity miss the significance of Tolkien’s presentation to interpretation of literature as a whole, and, again, to the entirety of artistic enterprise. Using the middle two sections of Tolkien’s essay as the ground, I further the demonstration of study guide preparation while unravelling some of the intricacies of Tolkien’s argument.

wk 7: 17 x 06 Tu: Close Reading of a Text: Benefits of Art; Listen, prepare notes on talks.
Assignment for next class session: Tolkien 75-90 (OFS, sections 5 and 6).
If I had more time, or were a bit more organized with the time I have, I might very well have included R G Collingwood’s masterful monograph The Principles of Art (Clarendon [Oxford UP] 1938; reprinted occasionally but currently o.o.p.) as a course text. Collingwood argues that pure art or art-in-itself is a simple (or mere) expression of self, without any other motive, and the interpretation of art-in-itself must therefore relate to an understanding of the self of the artist. Tolkien’s argument about art concentrates on the use or benefit of art. Tolkien and Collingwood were colleagues; Collingwood acknowledges Tolkien first in a list of "four special debts" in the preface to The Oxford History of England: Roman Britain and the English Settlements (1936). I wonder whether they ever discussed their disparate theories of art.

19 x 06 Th: Close Reading of a Text: Authorship and Imagination of Secondary Worlds; Listen, prepare notes on talks. Submit study guide on "On Fairy Stories" for review.
Assignment for next class session: LeGuin xi, 3-5, 263-304.

At this point in the course, I take the basic thesis of Tolkien’s "On Fairy-Stories" and apply it to an interpretation of Ursula K. LeGuin’s Always Coming Home. Eventually, I also apply it to Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-four: A Novel. One of the primary concerns is with the purpose and persona of the author in writing, and with the degree of alteration of the primary world in inventing the secondary world of the fiction. These concerns can also be related back to some of the discussion which should have occurred within the first week of class regarding the relationship between the author and the audience and degrees of formality (e.g. the difference between questions asked of a fellow-student and questions asked of an instructor). Although it is important always to bring in new material and not to "flog a dead horse", it is also essential to reinforce major ideas presented earlier and to build upon them when moving into a new unit. Here I am making a link to a concept which I plan to advance considerably in the Spring semester: the invention of imaginary worlds, together with the field of research as an outlet of imagination rather than of regurgitation.

The passages from LeGuin to be examined here are in two parts: first, some introductory material presenting the (important, but not always grasped) idea that the "people in this book might be going to have lived a long, long time from now in Northern California", and the difficulties of implementing that idea in writing; second, a series of "autobiographies" by those possible future persons, of varying ages and experiences. In examining these texts, I ask students to consider the verisimilitude of LeGuin’s writing. Tolkien argues that the best fantasy is based most realistically on the primary world, or is the most coherent in its invention, grounded in known laws of "our world of reality". I ask the students whether LeGuin has achieved the status of "the best fantasy" (she has).

wk 8: 24 x 06 Tu: Close Reading of a Text: Fictional and Factual Autobiography: discuss; prepare notes on discussion.
Assignment for next class session: Douglass chapters 1-8.
Now we turn to a work of non-fiction which some students find as distant and "fantastic" as LeGuin’s science fiction: Frederick Douglass’s Narrative. The discussion I ask students to begin with is concerned with what kinds of differences they would expect to find between non-fiction (factual) autobiography and fictional autobiography. What is the role of the writer as "I"? Can we trust the writer, or is all writing, even writing about the self, necessarily a fiction – that is, a kind of lie? By extension here, the nature of language as an instrument of lying can be exposed. How can verbal communication be made truthful?
Remind the students that a quiz on Douglass’s Narrative is coming up, and suggest to them that they should be making a study guide following the system presented earlier in the course.

26 x 06 Th: Truth, Lies, Politics, and Verbal Communication
Assignment for next class session: Douglass chapters 9-11, Appendix; A Parody.

Now that the students have read Douglass’s Narrative we can discuss the content. I like to uplift several major points: the role of reading and writing in Douglass’s liberation (I construe it as being a major theme of the work, and it is a link between that work and Orwell’s and LeGuin’s pieces); the purpose of Douglass’s writing; the audience of Douglass’s work; and the logos or factual and substantial content of Douglass’s work.

wk 9: 31 x 06 Tu: Quiz on Douglass’s Narrative. The link between imagination, art, and sub-creation: Douglass and Orwell.
Assignment for next class session: Orwell NEF 1-42.

Having read Douglass’s account of a "factual" slave, we will begin reading a fictional account of a slave – Winston Smith.

November
2 xi 06 Th: Close Reading of Nineteen Eighty-Four
Assignment for next class session: Orwell NEF 42-92.

wk 10: 7 xi 06 Tu: Close Reading of Nineteen Eighty-Four
Assignment for next class session: review "One" in NEF and prepare study guide.

9 xi 06 Th: Quiz on first section of Nineteen Eighty-Four
Assignment for next class session: Orwell NEF 93-141.

wk 11: 14 xi 06 Tu Close Reading of Nineteen Eighty-Four
Assignment for next class session: Orwell NEF 141-200.

16 xi 06 Th Close Reading of Nineteen Eighty-Four
Assignment for next class session: Orwell NEF 201-279.

wk 12: no classes, Thanksgiving Break (21 and 23 xi 06)

wk 13: 28 xi 06 Tu Quiz on Nineteen Eighty-Four. Writing an effective Rhetorical Analysis: Topic and thesis construction.
Back to this business of topic and thesis construction. Direct the student again to Faigley 117-132.

30 xi 06 Th Writing an effective rhetorical analysis: outlining
(Note to instructors: 20 xi 06 M is a teaching day, and makes up for the Labor Day late start; see above)

December
wk 14: 5 xii 06 Tu Writing an effective rhetorical analysis: drafting

7 xii 06 Th Writing an effective rhetorical analysis: revision

wk 15: 12 xii 06 Tu Writing and effective rhetorical analysis: final polish

14 xii 06 Th: Rhetorical analysis due at beginning of class session.

(Note to instructors: Last day of classes for the semester is 15 xii 06 F; grades are due 2 business days ("48 hrs") after the last class session; grades for classes ending 13 xii 06 W are therefore due 15 xii 06 F at 9:45 a.m. (if morning sessions) or 18 xii 06 M at 9 a.m. (if evening session); for classes ending 14 xii 06 Th, grades are due 18 xii 06 M at 9 a.m. (morning or evening sessions); for classes ending 15 xii 06 Fr, grades are due 19 xii 06 Tu at 9:45 a.m. (if morning session) or 20 xii 06 W at 9 a.m. (if evening session). If you can turn in your grades earlier than the times listed above, the Registrar will be very pleased; do not turn in grades later than the times listed above without prior discussion with the Registrar and the Chair of the Department at peril of your faculty appointment.)

Preparing for the Fall term 2006

Here is a brief listing of the elements of grading I plan to use in the Fall. The notations l, s, r, w refer to the dominant skill emphasized in the exercises; in cases with all four, the submitted work is the culmination of work in all four areas, although in these cases reading and especially writing will be the most obvious skills demonstrated.

Elements of Grading, FVC 101 F 06 Achtermann

Oral presentations from Faigley (10%)
presentations on paragraphs (5%) (s)
presentations on effective style (5%) (s)

Class participation (15%)
discussion (5%) (s, l)
notes on instructor talks (5%) (l, w)
notes on discussion (5%) (l, w)

In-class writing exercises: (25%)
blog/obituary (5%) (w)
paragraph (5%) (w)
reworked paragraph (5%) (w, r)
first draft + reworked draft of essay on Balzac and Tolkien (5%) (w, r)
revision of essay of Balzac and Tolkien (5%) (w, r)

Quizzes: (15%)
quiz on Narrative (5%)
quiz on "One" in NEF (5%)
quiz on NEF (5%)

Study Guide for "On Fairy-Stories" (5%) (l, r, w)

Comparative essay on Balzac and Tolkien (15%) (l, s, r, w)

Rhetorical Analysis of Narrative or NEF or both (15%) (l, s, r, w)



The course texts upon which these structures are based are as follows:

Douglass, Frederick. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass... Preface by William Lloyd Garrison, Introductory letter by Wendell Phillips. (1845). New York, Dover: 2001.

Faigley, Lester. The Penguin Handbook. 2nd ed. New York: Pearson Longman, 2006.

LeGuin, Ursula. Always Coming Home. Berkeley, U California P, 2001.

Orwell, George. Nineteen Eighty-Four: A Novel. (1949). Afterword by Erich Fromm. New York: Plume (Harcourt Brace): 1981.

Orwell, George. Why I Write. New York, Penguin: 2005.

Tolkien, J R R. The Tolkien Reader. Foreword by Peter S. Beagle. New York: Ballantine, 1966.

I use the entirety of the Douglass text, including the preface and letter, the appendix, and the parody. I will also use the entirety of Orwell NEF. Orwell Why I Write is a collection of short pieces: "Why I Write," "The Lion and the Unicorn," "A Hanging," and "Politics and the English Language". All of these offer a strong support to a reading of Nineteen Eighty-Four. I will, however, be using chiefly "Why" and "Politics". I will use two texts in the anthology The Tolkien Reader, namely "Leaf by Niggle", a short story which I will compare with the Balzac pieces the students are to have read for the summer (see http://cybersybils.com/Balzac.html for that text). I will make less use of LeGuin this semester than I might like, but will probably employ short pieces to break up the tedium, and some of the "autobiographic" materials as comparison to Douglass.

I use much of Faigley; in the Fall term I plan to use the following pages: 2-132, 231-241, 254-346; I will touch upon 351-395 (MLA) lightly; 513 -578; 827-831. I plan to emphasize research and the related scholastic tools in the Spring term; in the Fall my emphasis is on the basic tasks of listening, speaking, reading, and writing, and related skills such as note-taking, highlighting, study guide construction, organization of writing tasks, and time-management.

I hope that you will follow my basic outline of readings from Faigley and supplement as I have done with the above texts using whatever supplemental texts you have selected. In the perfect world I envision, everyone will use the superb texts I have chosen, but in this vale of shadows you are welcome to do as you think best.

The following schedule is more or less what I plan to present to the students. It is the barest outline. In the next posting I will provide some more detailed suggestions in way of a teachers's guide. For reasons I hope to make clear to you all in another venue I have not been able to proceed further, although such process is eminently (and immanently) desirable.


Working (Student) Schedule: Foundations of Verbal Communication I & II, 2006-07

Fall 2006: FVC 101

September
wk 1: 5 ix 06 Tu Introductions
Six Questions, Blog Introduction or Pen Pal Letter and Obituary, the course syllabus.
Assignment for next class session: read Faigley 2-6; Tolkien 100-120 ("Leaf by Niggle"; for comparison with Balzac’s "Unknown Masterpiece").

7 ix 06 Th Introductions, continued; the rhetorical situation; the three purposes for verbal communication identified in Faigley (20,21).
Assignment for next class session: Faigley 7-21.

wk 2: 12 ix 06 Tu: Words, Images, and Graphics; Marking Texts
Handout on marking texts (underlining, preparing marginal notes, etc.); sample text marking.
Assignment for next class session: Faigley 22-36; Orwell, "Why" 1-10.

14 ix 06 Th: Discuss whether Orwell’s essay "Why I Write" could be presented non-verbally. Reflective writing exercise responding to the questions: Why do you engage in the artistic work you do? In what way is your motivation for your artwork like Orwell’s motivation to write? When your work is not the best, why do you think that is?
Assignment for next class session: Prepare yourself for the comparative essay by relaxing and breathing deeply.

wk 3: 19 ix 06 Tu: Writing Essay Examinations; Planning and Drafting; Comparative essay on "The Unknown Masterpiece" and "Leaf By Niggle"
Assignment for next class session: Faigley 38-62; Tolkien 33 (as example of topic and thesis).

21 ix 06 Th Composing Paragraphs: Examples from Orwell’s "The Lion and the Unicorn" and "Politics and the English Language".
Faigley enumerates seven types of paragraphs; you will prepare a brief oral presentation on one type of paragraph (as assigned) and also compose an example of the paragraph style as part of the larger essay on Balzac and Tolkien. These will be presented in class next time.
Assignment for next class session: Faigley 63-86.

wk 4: 26 ix Tu Redrafting Comparative essay using Faigley’s instructions (75-93). Submit reworked draft.
Assignment for next class session: Faigley 87-92.

28 ix 06 Th Reviewing other students’s work (using Faigley 93-102). Submit revisions.
Assignment for next class session: Faigley 93-102.

October

Beginning the 10th of October, we will experience a series of oral presentations on material from Faigley 514-578. Assignments are to be made in the first week of October. Each student will be responsible for the material in one section in Faigley; the presentations will be scored on the basic of informational accuracy, clarity of organization, projection and enunciation, and so on. I distribute rubrics for the presentations when I make the assignments.

wk 5: 3 x 06 Tu: Critical Reading and Viewing; Fallacies
Assignment for next class session: Faigley 104-116; Orwell, "Why" 102-120.

5 x 06 Th: submit final draft of comparative essay; Analysis
Questions for rhetorical analysis applied to Orwell, "Why I Write" and "Politics and the English Language".
Assignment for next class session: Faigley 117-132.

wk 6: 10 x 06 Tu: Close Reading of a Text: Tolkien’s "On Fairy-Stories"; How to create study guides; Listen, prepare notes on talks.
Assignment for next class session: Tolkien 33-57 (OFS, sections 1 and 2).

12 x 06 Th: Close Reading of a Text: The Value and Function of Fiction; Listen, prepare notes on talks.
Assignment for next class session: Tolkien 57-75 (OFS, sections 3 and 4).

wk 7: 17 x 06 Tu: Close Reading of a Text: Benefits of Art; Listen, prepare notes on talks.
Assignment for next class session: Tolkien 75-90 (OFS, sections 5 and 6).

19 x 06 Th: Close Reading of a Text: Authorship and Imagination of Secondary Worlds; Listen, prepare notes on talks. Submit study guide on "On Fairy Stories" for review.
Assignment for next class session: LeGuin xi, 3-5, 263-304.

wk 8: 24 x 06 Tu: Close Reading of a Text: Fictional and Factual Autobiography: discuss; prepare notes on discussion.
Assignment for next class session: Douglass chapters 1-8.

26 x 06 Th
Assignment for next class session: Douglass chapters 9-11, Appendix; A Parody.

wk 9: 31 x 06 Tu: Quiz on Narrative. The link between imagination, art, and sub-creation: Douglass and Orwell.

November
2 xi 06 Th: Close Reading of Nineteen Eighty-Four
Assignment for next class session: Orwell NEF 1-42.

wk 10: 7 xi 06 Tu: Close Reading of Nineteen Eighty-Four
Assignment for next class session: Orwell NEF 42-92.

9 xi 06 Th: Quiz on first section of Nineteen Eighty-Four
Assignment for next class session: Orwell NEF 93-141.

wk 11: 14 xi 06 Tu
Assignment for next class session: Orwell NEF 141-200.

16 xi 06 Th
Assignment for next class session: Orwell NEF 201-279.

wk 12: no classes, Thanksgiving Break (21 and 23 xi 06)

wk 13: 28 xi 06 Tu Quiz on Nineteen Eighty-Four. Writing an effective Rhetorical Analysis: Topic and thesis construction.

30 xi 06 Th Writing an effective rhetorical analysis: outlining.

December
wk 14: 5 xii 06 Tu Writing an effective rhetorical analysis: drafting.

7 xii 06 Th Writing an effective rhetorical analysis: revision.

wk 15: 12 xii 06 Tu Writing and effective rhetorical analysis: final polish.

14 xii 06 Th: Rhetorical analysis due at beginning of class session.

Thursday, June 15, 2006

Further notes on listening; talk topics on listening

Further Notes on Listening

Listening ultimately is a matter of concentration and conscious activity.
Impediments to listening include distractions, sensory or mental; physical impairments such as inebriateion, lack of good blood flow, lack of oxygen.
Assessing what distracts and what is tolerable is itself an excellent exercise. Techniques for listening: concentration. Remove distractions, limit musical choices, background noise, etc. inasmuch as one can and as one finds them distracting.
Work on developing means to improve concentration and focus as well as blood flow and slow release of sugars to the brain.
Breakfast is tremendously important to learning; a breakfast of complex carbohydrates is better than one of sugar-caffeine-starch (e.g. coffee, Red Bull, and a Twinkie is not a good breakfast for listening and thinking).

Topics Relating to Listening:

Listening as distinct from hearing

Listening as a conscious activity may be linked to memory but probably not as strongly as smell

One must cultivate ways to listen; one must know what to listen for

practice listening; listening practice

Listening with judgment and listening without judgment; prejudice limits listening

How to combine listening and reading
How to combine listening and writing
dictation
note-taking

How to tell a general point from a specific
examples and illustrations
tangents and meanders

Where speakers often fail their listeners
the importance of the pause
speaking speed and listening speed
ask for time to take notes
instructors/speakers:
stop, summarize, have students/listeners recap and then take notes

If instructors’ notes are clear and comprehensive, students’s should be also

Listening grading into speech
avoid straw person fallacy: always state or restate the opposing or alternate position

Listening

Here are the results of the Foundations of Verbal Communications staff examination of "listening" at our meeting 25 May 2006:

David Spolum on Listening:

To listen is to: visualize in one’s mind’s eye what is being spoken – if it is realistic or factual in nature then to link it to reality (even perhaps one’s personal experience) – if fantastic or abstract ion nature then to use one’s imagination (or attempt to) to envision what is being spoken.

Linda King Brown on Listening:

What is listening?

* being alert, aware, engaged, and present
* absorbing the facts, perspectives, opinions, descriptions of another person or persons speaking – of a text
– of a song
– of a piece of art

* processing but not immediately analyzing or drawing conclusions
* requires open state of mind; removal of "self"
* allowing communication to flow unhindered

Why is listening important to a college student?

* will constantly be exposed to new material and experiences in all of their classes
* must understand one’s own historical and cultural "context" so that any prejudices or preconceived notions of a subject can be identified

How can listening be improved?

* by removing distractions – physical and emotional
* refrain from judgment initially
* intentionally focus
* don’t let note-taking interfere

What are some tools, techniques, exercises one may practice to strengthen listening?

* in-class written responses
* waiting to speak, speak thoughtfully
* repeating, echoing another’s point of view for clarification
* asking questions


Mark Edward Achtermann on listening:

What is listening?

Listening is hearing made conscious. Listening is active.

Listening necessarily involves a degree of judgment, discernment, and categorization, but listening itself is neither categorizing, nor discerning, nor judging.

Listening is impaired by a false view of listening, by pre-judgment of what is heard, by external or internal distractions.

Why is listening important to a college student?

Many instructions are given only orally, or in written form but with oral additions. One must be able to follow oral directions, therefore one must be able to listen.

Most interactions with other students, academically and socially, will be oral; to get the most out of these interactions, and to avoid wrong understandings, one must be able to listen.

Much information provided in a college course is provided in the way of spoken presentations, whether discussions, formal or informal talks, or lectures. To be able to efficiently take in the information given, one must be able to listen.

Furthermore, listening allows one to experience the world more fully; the more conscious one is of the act of listening, the more one can direct and enlarge the experience of the world.

How can listening be improved?

To begin with, it is most useful to recognize that one cannot do more than one thing at once. We often deceive ourselves with the idea that we can do two or more things at once, but this is not correct – we may do them in so rapid a sequence as to seem to be doing more than one thing, but in fact only one thing is happening at a time. We may listen, or take notes, or doodle, or think about something unrelated to what we are hearing, but we cannot do all of these, or even three of these, or even two of these, at once. Thus, to listen, one must listen.

To listen, one must first be silent.

One can work on eliminating the impairments of listening. By cultivating a proper view of listening, one can overcome false views of listening. The chief false view of listening is that it is identical to hearing, and that it is passive. Listening is an activity. By becoming aware of one’s prejudices related to what one is hearing, one can set them to the side and listen without them. By reducing or eliminating distractions, external and internal, one can be more purely in contact with what one is hearing.

Correct posture for listening involves an upright spine and regular, even, deep (but not forced) breathing, the entire body still.

What are some tools one can use to improve listening?

Tools useful to listening are fundamentally hearing devices; listening is a mainly a matter of technique, not of tools.

In some cases, some amplification is required or helpful. Cupping a hand around the ear is in fact useful. Opening the mouth very slightly is also helpful. In more extreme cases, electronic amplification may be useful.

A tape recorder or similar recording device may be a useful tool in learning how to listen. If one has difficulty concentrating while listening, and finds that one’s mind drifts, one may be able to work on extending the time one may stay alert by listening to recordings; to say more is to delve into technique, however.

What are some techniques or exercises one can use to improve one’s listening?

Listening carefully to music is a good beginning. One might also listen to a recording of something other than music. The goal is to listen without imposing mental images or allowing the mind to drift from the music itself (or from the other material). By listening to the same material several times with the precise purpose of increasing the length of time during which one can concentrate solely on the music (or other material), eventually one will gain the ability to listen without prejudice or other internal distraction. Because we must often face many external distractions, using a recording which can be played back is helpful, as one can stop the exercise when one is distracted, and begin again, and so begin to determine the increase in concentration.

Listening carefully to another person’s argument and rephrasing the argument so that the meaning remains in the order given is also a good beginning. Note, however, that the rephrasing of the argument is a demonstration of the listening, rather than the listening itself.

An intermediate-level technique involves identifying or locating the sources of sounds, for example, learning to distinguish an oboe from a clarinet in a symphonic composition, or learning to distinguish the call of a robin from that of a sparrow. Learning to distinguish the patterns of human languages, whether one understands the words or not, is also a useful intermediate-level technique.

Wednesday, June 07, 2006

The Primary Work: Listening: Clarity

We must first determine goals for teaching foundations of verbal communication.

As I see it, all verbal communication is encompassed in four areas: listening, speaking, reading, and writing. I will assume here as a rule students who have all the average human senses and intellectual potential, rather than striving to point out the many possible exceptions and constructing special goals for them.

In the area of listening, anyone who has taught liberal arts even briefly knows that a great deal of information is conveyed through speech, and the student is expected to listen. So, even if our goal is only to prepare students for the remainder of their college career, listening is a skill we must specially cultivate. However, listening is a skill with many other applications than college study.

Listening requires a degree of clarity and focus.

Listening is not the same as hearing. Hearing is unconscious and occurs continuously. Listening is conscious, begins when a perceived sound is outside of a range of safety, and lasts only so long as the sounds perceived have not been characterized sufficiently to be sublimated.

In a world in which we are surrounded by sound, often by sound which could be meaningful, and furthermore by sound which, in a less artificial environment, would signify danger, consciousness of sound is rare.

Consciousness is driven by the will. If one does not wish to listen, one will not. The teacher, therefore, who wishes to communicate through sound, must find some way to command attention. However, once attention has been gained, the teacher must make clear that eventually the listener must self-direct.

One of the goals of the foundation of verbal communication courses therefore must be to provide students with techniques and tools whereby they may become conscious of sound.

One line of work has to do with emptying the mind of clutter, so that sound can enter.

Think of how often you have entered a classroom with thoughts other than those of the material you are to teach. Students are in the same position, although traditional college age students may be in a worse position, because of the neurology of adolescence. Assuming that you, the teacher, are physically an adult and your hormonal systems are relatively balanced, you are not in the same position as an eighteen-year-old. Thanks to past circumstances beyond our reach, we have a wide range of students, not all of whom are particularly verbally oriented, many of whom are ill-prepared for college, and many of whom, further, are not particularly interested in what we have to teach. Combine this with, in our circumstance, classes "early" in the morning, or in the afternoon after a full day of studio work, and the likelihood that a students has had far less than the recommended nine- to eleven-hours of sleep, has probably taken little or no time to prepare, and may have had a poor breakfast, and you should be amazed that any learning takes place at all.

It's not that students have no thoughts -- it's that they are too weak to resist the flow of thoughts.

What students need -- though they generally resist the idea for some reason (and we should explore this) -- is training in some meditation form or other which will provide a focused mind. I personally think this requires bodily relaxation and recognition of, but setting aside of, errant thought.

Posture, therefore, is a priority issue.

This sounds archaic, I know, or New Agey. I'll readily admit the eccentricity of suggesting that on the first day of college, the instructors should insist before anything else upon good posture.

I insist that we should so insist. All else follows from this.

We might also begin, as an "icebreaker", with "what did you have for breakfast?" Perhaps the wealthier among us might go so far as to bring something like granola bars in for those students whose breakfasts have been unacceptable. I cannot emphasize enough how basic health, hygiene, and nutrition will determine effectiveness of learning. Call me a nut.

One cannot listen until one has internal silence. This means a silence of unrelated thoughts, but also of related ones. If I am listening to a speaker and begin ruminating upon one of her points, I miss the others, because I am still back with that one point.

We must remember as speakers that 1) we must provide silence in which what we have spoken can be processed and 2) inexperienced listeners require guidance in interpreting nuance.

On the first point, this means:
Do not speak constantly (a lesson I have never learned well). Pause periodically. I often write main points on the board as full sentences, and while I write I try not to speak. This provides processing time. Have you ever attended a Power Point presentation and felt terribly rushed? Good. That is what your students experience everyday. Power Point sucks because everything is "there" already, usually too much, and the presenter tends to rush through it so fast that you can't take it in. So what if you have a print out of the whole thing. Are you really going to review it? Be honest. So, what have we learned?
Provide plenty of 'wait time' when asking questions. Two minutes is not excessive -- rarely will students take that long before someone "cracks" and answers. Use a watch, if you must.

On the second point, this means:
Most contemporary college students have no sense of the distinction between "irony" and "sarcasm". Never employ sarcasm, as much as you may be tempted to do so. Irony is a hallowed pedagogical tool, but note the Oxford primary definition: "ignorance deliberately feigned". Be certain that you are yourself clear on the distinction between irony and sarcasm. Feigned ignorance can draw a student out, but not if you give yourself the appearance of the Omniscient One. Socrates succeeded in using irony as a tool because he did so frequently and never made great claims for what he did, in the end, seem to know.
Most contemporary college students seem to have difficulty distinguishing between "example" and "ramble". We may rail at this as a deplorable circumstance -- and it assuredly is deplorable -- but we are where we are, and absent a vessel to transport us to the (probably non-existent) world in which example and ramble were or are or will be clearly distinguishable to students, we must take the situation as it is. We can either abandon illustrative tangents, or find a way to make it clear that we are, in fact, now going on a bit of a verbal excursion, giving examples and relating them immediately back to the point illustrated. Subtlety can be cultivated, but don't expect much of it in the average foundation-year student.

Remember: we have four years to accomplish the result. Don't rush. Slow and steady wins the race.

The Purpose of this Blog

In a general sense, this blog is established for the use of the Department of Liberal Arts of the Pennsylvania College of Art and Design in a loose and unofficial capacity. Presentations made here in my name (ME Achtermann), reflect my own views, which are generally in accord with the official position of the College, but should not be construed as being universally so in accord. This is not an official organ of the College. Reader, are you getting this? If you want the official website of the Pennsylvania College of Art and Design, go to www.pcad.edu. You will find that the faculty of the Department of Liberal Arts are not represented there. We are busy teaching, and writing blogs about teaching.

In a more specific and immediate sense, this blog is designed as a forum for the Foundations of Verbal Communications Group at the Pennsylvania College of Art and Design in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. It provides an opportunity for faculty to present their views on the nature of verbal communications and for others to add -- civilly, constructively, and specifically -- comment and suggestion.

Hopefully here we will be able to thrash out the syllabi and other materials for the courses "Foundations of Verbal Communication 001: Developmental Writing Workshop" and "Foundations of Verbal Communication 101 and 102: Listening, Speaking, Reading, Writing". Instructors please note: do not post final-form examinations here unless you wish students to be able to view them prior to their administration!