Reflective Comments about Fall 2015

Following a pattern begun in my earlier teaching materials (witness posts here, here, here, here, here, and here) and continued at the end of the 2015 CEAT Summer Bridge Program at Oklahoma State University, comments below offer discussions of student demographics and performance across the term in ENGL 1113: Composition I, Sections 025, 044, 084, and 102 during the Fall 2015 instructional term at Oklahoma State University, as well as presenting overall impressions and implications for further teaching. Attached, too, is a summative document (here), providing best versions of the course syllabus, course calendar, and major assignment sheets offered to students in the noted classes and term.

Class Demographics

Demographic data were assessed near the end of the Fall 2015 term through a survey not unlike that offered early in the term; the end-of-term survey is noted here. The results of the earlier survey are reported here. As in the earlier survey, both general and academic demographic data were solicited.

At the end of the term, a total of 66 students were enrolled across the four sections–16 in Section 025, 18 in Section 044, 15 in Section 084, and 17 in Section 102. The numbers represent declines: ten in total, comprised of three from Section 025, one from Section 044, four from Section 084, and two from Section 102. A total of 59 students responded to the end-of-term survey–12 from Section 025 (20.3% of the total), 16 from Section 044 (27.1% of the total), 13 from Section 084 (22% of the total), and 18 from Section 102 (30.5% of the total, among which at least one duplicate answer was identified). The mismatch of number of students and number of responses per section admittedly introduces some uncertainty into survey results, although they are likely to be minor.

General Demography

As in the earlier survey, students were asked to report age, gender identification, racial and ethnic identifications (following the 2010 US Census Bureau categories and definitions), and socio-economic status. Available answers for age were “Under 17,” “17,” “18,” “19,” “Over 19,” and “Prefer not to respond.” Students were allowed to select one and only one answer. Thirty-seven respondents (62.7% of the total) attested to being 18 years of age, 19 (32.2%) reported being 19, and three (5.1%) reported being over 19 years of age. Results are consistent with first-year courses filled with largely traditional students, and if the students skew slightly older at the end of the term than the beginning, that is only to be expected.

Available answers for gender identification were “Female,” “Intersex,” “Male,” “Trans,” “Prefer not to identify,” and “Other.” Students were allowed to select one and only one answer. Thirty-one students (52.5% of the total) self-identified as male; the remaining 28 (47.5% of the total) identified as female, and no respondents selected any other option. At the end of the term, then, respondents skewed more male than early in the term, still at variance with the commonplace that more young women than men enroll in collegiate coursework.

Available answers for racial identification were “American Indian or Alaska Native,” “Asian,” “Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander,” “Black or African-American,” “White,” “Some Other Race,” and “Prefer not to identify.” Students were allowed to select multiple answers. Twelve respondents (20.3% of the total) self-identified as White, ten (16.9%) as Black or African-American, six (10.2%) as American Indian or Alaska Native, four (6.8%) as Asian, two (3.4%) as “Some Other Race,” and one (1.7%) as Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander. One opted not to answer. The sharp reduction in students self-identifying as White from the early survey to the end-of-term survey is of uncertain source; changes to other sets of responses are of similarly unclear origin.

Available answers for ethnic identification–specifically, identification as Hispanic–were “Yes,” “No,” and “Prefer not to identify. Students were allowed to select one and only one option. Fifty-four respondents (91.5% of the total) self-identified as non-Hispanic; the remaining five (8.5% of the total) self-identified as being Hispanic. Results are largely in line with the earlier survey.

Socio-economic status was posed as an open-ended question. Responses were coded to account for substantially similar answers, and the identified duplicate answer was eliminated. Doing so indicated that 27 respondents offered some variant on “middle class,” with three identifying themselves as upper-middle-class and two identifying themselves as lower-middle-class. The five students who offered definitions marked middle-class life as addressing material needs (food, shelter, clothing) without much additional luxury. Twenty-six respondents opted not to answer. Two respondents identified themselves as upper class. Three additional respondents gave unique answers; one identified as a student for socio-economic status, one reported being dependent upon parents, and the third identified “White” as a socio-economic determiner–an answer with uncomfortable implications. The preponderance of self-identifications, however, still corresponds with typical ideas of student populations at state universities.

Academic Demography

As in the earlier survey, students were also asked to report section of enrollment, classification, current GPA, College of major, major, and minor (if available). Section of enrollment is discussed above.

Available responses to classification were “Freshman,” “Sophomore,” “Junior,” “Senior,” and “Prefer not to respond.” Students were allowed to select one and only one answer. Fifty-eight respondents (98.3% of the total) reported being first-year students, one (1.7%) reported being a senior, and no other results were selected. The distribution is sensible against the expectation that first-year students take first-year classes.

Available responses about current GPA were “3.5+,” “3.0-3.499,” “2.5-2.999,” “2.0-2.499,” “1.5-1.999,” “1.0-1.499,” “Below 1.0,” “No GPA recorded yet,” and “Prefer not to respond.” Students were allowed to select one and only one answer. Nineteen respondents (32.2%) reported having no recorded GPA as yet; another 19 reported having a GPA of 3.0 to 3.499. Eleven (18.6%) reported a GPA of 2.5-2.999; six (10.2%) reported a GPA of 3.5+. One each reported a GPA of 2.0 to 2.499 and 1.5 to 1.999. Two opted not to respond, and no other responses were submitted. The relative rise in students recording a GPA is perhaps due to preliminary scores; Oklahoma State University offers six-week grades to its students. They do not factor into the GPA proper, but they do allow an idea of class standing in advance of semester grades being determined.

Available responses about the College of major included “Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources”; “Arts and Sciences”; “Education”; “Engineering, Architecture, and Technology”; “Human Sciences”; “Spears School of Business”; “Undeclared”; “Prefer not to identify”; and “Other.” Students were allowed to select one and only one answer; “Other” was indicated as the appropriate response for those pursuing double majors whose majors cross Colleges. Thirteen students (22% of the total) indicated having a major in Engineering, Architecture, and Technology; 12 (20.3%) in Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources; ten (16.9%) in Arts and Sciences;  seven (11.9%) in the Spears School of Business; six (10.2%) in Human Sciences; and three (5.1%) in Education. Four (6.8% of the total) responded with “Other,” while three (5.1%) identified as undeclared and one (1.7%) opted not to respond.

Individual majors were reported in open-ended questions. After coding to consolidate effectively equivalent responses, five students were found to identify as Mechanical Engineering majors. Five others reported Animal Science or some variant as a major; two reported Animal Science alone, while one each indicated a double-major with Agricultural Communications and Agricultural Education, and one other reported majoring in Animal Science as a precursor to veterinary school. Three reported some variation on a major in Computer Science; two indicated Computer Science alone as the major, with one other double-majoring in Computer Science and Secondary Education with English option. Three others reported majoring in Human Development and Family Sciences. Two reported majoring in each of Civil Engineering and Elementary Education. Another two reported majoring in a variation of Agricultural Education (in addition to the double-major listed above), one alone and one as a double-major with Agricultural Communications. Additionally, one each reported majoring in each of the following:

  • Accounting and Finance
  • Applied Sociology
  • Architecture
  • Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
  • Business
  • Chemical Engineering
  • Construction Management Technology
  • Communication Sciences and Disorders
  • Computer Engineering
  • Economics
  • Electrical Engineer
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Fashion Merchandising
  • Finance
  • Graphic Design
  • Health Education
  • Hotel and Restaurant Administration
  • Human Nutrition
  • Industrial Engineering
  • International Business
  • Landscape Architecture
  • Marketing
  • Mathematics
  • Multimedia Journalism
  • Nursing
  • Nutritional Sciences and Allied Health
  • Political Science and Foreign Language double major
  • Psychology (a duplicate answer was eliminated)
  • Sports Media
  • Wildlife Biology as a precursor to veterinary school
  • Wildlife Ecology and Management

Further, one student self-identified as undeclared; five students opted not to identify their majors. Such shifts among majors are not unexpected at any level of undergraduate work.

Minors were also reported in open-ended questions. After coding to consolidate effectively equivalent responses, three students were found to have reported minoring in Management and two in each of Philosophy and Spanish. One respondent each offered the following: Art; Business; Marketing; Music, Japanese, or German; Pre-Law; Pre-Vet; and Psychology. Additionally, 25 students reported having or desiring no minor. Eleven indicated being unsure of what minor they would select or if they would select one. Five opted not to identify (a duplicate response was deleted.) One student simply answered “Yes.” Such shifts as occurred in reported minor since the earlier survey are no less expected than changes to majors.

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Class Performance

Class performance was assessed by evaluating a series of major (Literacy Narrative, Profile, Textual Analysis, Evaluation, and Final Exam) and minor assignments, as well as such factors as professionalism and attendance, over the course of the instructional term and assigning grades in accordance with that evaluation. Other than attendance, handling of which was determined at the programmatic level, each was scored using a scale of A+ through zero, either directly or as a means of assigning categorical scores to be averaged for a final score. Factors contributing to grading were weighted unevenly, as indicated below:

  • Literacy Narrative, 10% of total grade
  • Profile, 15% of total grade
  • Textual Analysis, 20% of total grade
  • Evaluation, 20% of total grade
  • Final Exam, 5% of total grade
  • Special Exercise, 5% of total grade
  • Minor Assignments, cumulatively 15% of total grade
  • Student Professionalism, 10% of total grade

While discussion of individual assignments and individual student performance exceeds what is appropriate for such a report as this, general tendencies within and among the individual sections can be reported.

Section 025

Section 025 was scheduled to meet on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays at 1030 in Engineering South Room 213A.

  • End-of-term enrollment: 16
  • Average class score: 72.796 (C)
  • Standard deviation: 11.059
  • Students earning a grade of A (90%+): 1
  • Students earning a grade of F (below 60%): 4 (all incurred absence penalties)

Student participation was generally restricted, perhaps as a result of the timing of the class. Four of the sixteen enrolled at the end of the term) lost points due to absences in the section than in any other this term, with one failing outright for that reason.

Section 044

Section 044 was scheduled to meet on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays at 1330 in Classroom Building Room 108.

  • End-of-term enrollment: 18
  • Average class score: 78.255 (C)
  • Standard deviation: 7.165
  • Students earning a grade of A (90%+): 2
  • Students earning a grade of F (below 60%): 2 (both due to absence penalties)

Student participation in the section was excellent, although class discussions did tend to distraction throughout the term. Absences were most detrimental to this section’s performance; four students lost points due to absence penalties, with two failing the class outright for that reason.

Section 084

Section 084 was scheduled to meet on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays at 0830 in Morrill Hall Room 306.

  • End-of-term enrollment: 15
  • Average class score: 80.867 (B)
  • Standard deviation: 7.549
  • Students earning a grade of A (90%+): 1
  • Students earning a grade of F (below 60%): 0

Student participation in the class was generally good despite the early time of day. Remarkably, no students lost points due to absence penalties, although more withdrew from this section than from the other three. More than half (eight of the fifteen) of those who remained enrolled earned a grade of B.

Section 102

Section 102 was scheduled to meet on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays at 1230 in Classroom Building Room 221.

  • End-of-term enrollment: 17
  • Average class score: 73.089 (C)
  • Standard deviation: 10.313
  • Students earning a grade of A (90%+): 1
  • Students earning a grade of F (below 60%): 2

Student participation was generally restricted, perhaps as a result of the timing of the class. Only one student suffered grade penalties due to absences, although none failed outright as a result of absences. Non-submission of assignments was higher in this section than in any other this term, contributing to lowered overall scores; both of the students who received a grade of F did so due to not submitting one of the major papers.

Overall Data

In aggregate, the four sections yield the following results:

  • End-of-term enrollment: 66
  • Average class score: 76.054 (C)
  • Standard deviation: 9.826
  • Students earning a grade of A (90%+): 5
  • Students earning a grade of F (below 60%): 8

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Impressions and Implications

Gaining perspective on results from the Fall 2015 term obliges looking back to the Spring 2014 term, the last time I had been assigned to teach sections of ENGL 1113 at Oklahoma State University. I did not track demographic data during that term, at least not in any substantive way, so I cannot offer comparisons between that term’s classes and those I taught in the Fall 2015 term in that regard. I can, however, comment about comparative grading. The classes seem reasonably in line with one another for the most part; the two sections of ENGL 1113 I taught in the Spring 2014 instructional term showed averages in the lower C range, somewhat lower than the aggregate scores of the Fall 2015 term’s classes. More students earned As in Fall 2015 than in Spring 2014, although the numbers are affected by the number of sections taught. Fewer students failed in the Fall 2015 term than in the Spring 2014 term, however, eight to nine, respectively. Whether this means that the students were better, my teaching improved, or my grading grew more lax is not clear. A combination of all three factors is likely at work.

There are matters I need to address as I move forward, I know. More explicit instruction earlier in assignment sequences will be helpful, including more detailed walk-throughs of assignments and various component parts thereof. So will narrower breakdowns of the assignments. Occasional comments have been made about the difficulty of reading my assignment sheets–not the formatting, but the content–although I am not sure how to address them more fully. Perhaps a “quick-and-dirty” section, such as many textbooks have at chapters’ ends, will be of use. Commentary to that effect might be welcome.

The Fall 2015 term was better than most previous terms at Oklahoma State University in the amount of sample work that was provided. I wrote more of the assignments alongside my students this term than in most previous ones. Perhaps it helped. (I note also that, in the event I teach ENGL 1113 at Oklahoma State University again, I will be able to pull from student examples, as well, having secured permission from many to use their work to that end. It should also help.) Certainly, it did not hurt; I shall continue the practice in future terms.

I also made an effort to make my classrooms more responsive and student-centered, if only through the series of surveys I administered during the term. The entry and exit surveys were used primarily to gather data that has since been reported, admittedly, but the Week 7 survey (results from which are reported here) and the survey used to determine the form of the Final Exam both sought specific student responses, using them to shape instruction and assignments after their conclusions. I hope that students came away from the exercises with a greater sense of agency in their classes; I do not think they came away with less a sense of ownership, and so I think I will be continuing the survey practice in future terms, as well.

In all, the Fall 2015 term was a rewarding experience for me; I hope it was for my students, as well. At its end, I find myself looking forward to the next term, waiting with hope for what it will bring.

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Class Reports: ENGL 1113: Composition I, Sections 025, 044, 084, and 102- 7 through 11 December 2015

Students in each section sat for the FinEx, the text of which derives from Exeter Book Riddle 14. The traditional answer to the riddle presented is “horn,” although “correctness” of the answer is not factored into grading of the FinEx. Reports of final grades and discussions of classroom demographics and impressions are forthcoming.

Regarding meetings and attendance:

  • Section 025 met as scheduled, at 1000 on 11 December 2015, in Engineering South 213 A. The class roster showed 16 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Fifteen receive credit for attendance, verified via the FinEx.
  • Section 044 met as scheduled, at 1400 on 11 December 2015, in Classroom Building 108. The class roster showed 18 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Sixteen receive credit for attendance, verified via the FinEx.
  • Section 084 met as scheduled, at 0800 on 7 December 2015, in Morrill Hall 306. The class roster showed 15 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. All receive credit for attendance, verified via the FinEx.
  • Section 102 met as scheduled, at 1000 on 9 December 2015, in Classroom Building 221. The class roster showed 17 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Sixteen receive credit for attendance, verified via the FinEx.
  • No office hours were held.

Initial Comments for the Spring 2016 Term at Oklahoma State University

I have just received an email with my Spring 2016 teaching schedule. It seems I will be teaching three sections of ENGL 1213: Composition II:

  • Section 015, MWF 1030-1120, Classroom Building Room 217;
  • Section 023, MWF 1130-1220, Classroom Building Room 121; and
  • Section 040, MWF 0830-0920, Morrill Hall Room 206

It will be my first time teaching the course at Oklahoma State University (I have taught the equivalent elsewhere), and I am informed there will be programmatic changes, so the information already posted to my website will doubtlessly be changing. (It is a shame, because many of the materials already available on this website would have been helpful. Maybe they will still be.) That said, I have noted some familiar names on the already-full rosters, and I am glad of it.

I mean to continue several of the practices I have developed, retained, or resumed during the Fall 2015 term. Reports of classroom activities will continue, as will my efforts to draft sample assignments alongside my students. I am likely to continue to use riddle quizzes, as well; students will still benefit from practice in proofreading and critical thinking and argumentation such as they provide, and I will still benefit from the translation practice converting texts from older Englishes to modern English offers. Surveys asking after demographic and academic data, as well as impressions of the course, will likely also be forthcoming. I feel they have been helpful, and that seems reason enough to try them again.

More information will, of course, be forthcoming.

Class Reports: ENGL 1113: Composition I, Sections 025, 044, 084, and 102- 4 December 2015

Discussion asked after final questions and comments. Class time also saw a coursework use form distributed, filled out, and collected.

Students are reminded of the following due dates:

  • FinEx, by section
    • Section 025, 11 December 2015, 1000-1150
    • Section 044, 11 December 2015, 1400-1550
    • Section 084, 7 December 2015, 0800-0950
    • Section 102, 9 December 2015, 1000-1150

Students are also reminded that office hours will not be held next week due to exam schedules.

Regarding meetings and attendance:

  • Section 025 met as scheduled, at 1030 in Engineering South 213 A. The class roster showed 16 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Eleven attended, verified via the coursework use form. Student participation was adequate.
  • Section 044 met as scheduled, at 1330 in Classroom Building 108. The class roster showed 18 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Fourteen attended, verified via the coursework use form. Student participation was good.
  • Section 084 met as scheduled, at 0830 in Morrill Hall 306. The class roster showed 15 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Eleven attended, verified via the coursework use form. Student participation was adequate.
  • Section 102 met as scheduled, at 1230 in Classroom Building 221. The class roster showed 17 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Fifteen attended, verified via the coursework use form. Student participation was adequate.
  • No students attended office hours.

Class Reports: ENGL 1113: Composition I, Sections 025, 044, 084, and 102- 2 December 2015

Discussion again centered on the FinEx, working through a practice exercise centering on a riddle derived from Exeter Book Riddle 44. (Students had, during the previous class meeting, noted wanting to try one of the “funnier” riddles.)

Students are reminded of the following due dates:

  • FinEx, by section
    • Section 025, 11 December 2015, 1000-1150
    • Section 044, 11 December 2015, 1400-1550
    • Section 084, 7 December 2015, 0800-0950
    • Section 102, 9 December 2015, 1000-1150

Regarding meetings and attendance:

  • Section 025 met as scheduled, at 1030 in Engineering South 213 A. The class roster showed 16 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Fourteen attended, verified informally. Student participation was adequate.
  • Section 044 met as scheduled, at 1330 in Classroom Building 108. The class roster showed 18 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Sixteen attended, verified informally. Student participation was excellent.
  • Section 084 met as scheduled, at 0830 in Morrill Hall 306. The class roster showed 15 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Thirteen attended, verified informally. Student participation was excellent.
  • Section 102 met as scheduled, at 1230 in Classroom Building 221. The class roster showed 17 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Sixteen attended, verified informally. Student participation was good.
  • One student attended office hours.

Class Reports: ENGL 1113: Composition I, Sections 025, 044, 084, and 102- 30 November 2015

Discussion centered on the FinEx, for which the assignment sheet was distributed at the previous class meeting. Mention was made of a survey, as well; it is offered at the following link: http://goo.gl/forms/5TPm7BPEFf.

Class concluded with another riddle quiz, adapted from Exeter Book Riddle 34; the traditional answer is “rake” or “pitchfork.” “Correctness” of the answer given, however, is not factored into grading of the quizzes.

Students are reminded of the following due dates:

  • FinEx, by section
    • Section 025, 11 December 2015, 1000-1150
    • Section 044, 11 December 2015, 1400-1550
    • Section 084, 7 December 2015, 0800-0950
    • Section 102, 9 December 2015, 1000-1150

Regarding meetings and attendance:

  • Section 025 met as scheduled, at 1030 in Engineering South 213 A. The class roster showed 16 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Twelve attended, verified through the quiz noted above. Student participation was subdued.
  • Section 044 met as scheduled, at 1330 in Classroom Building 108. The class roster showed 18 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Fifteen attended, verified through the quiz noted above. Student participation was good, if somewhat distracted.
  • Section 084 met as scheduled, at 0830 in Morrill Hall 306. The class roster showed 15 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Thirteen attended, verified through the quiz noted above. Student participation was adequate.
  • Section 102 met as scheduled, at 1230 in Classroom Building 221. The class roster showed 17 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Sixteen attended, verified through the quiz noted above. Student participation was adequate.
  • No students attended office hours.

A Statement of Teaching Philosophy

I have for some time been working on revising my teaching philosophy from an earlier statement sent out as part of the many job applications I have written since 2012. Some months ago, I stumbled into a brief version of the text appearing below (the first two paragraphs), and I have been using it since. It did not seem to me to be enough, however; the brief version does not address the teaching I have done inside and outside the classroom. Hence the version appearing below.

I will doubtlessly return to it in the future, of course. As I teach more classes, I will have additional paragraphs to write. As I teach more of the same classes and work with more tutees, my attitudes and techniques will change, and the text will need to change to reflect those changes. 

My experience of higher education and life following it has not been unlike what Donna Dunbar-Odom describes in Defying the Odds. Both of my parents attended college without completing it; my father has worked in building trades throughout my life, and my mother (who has since returned to college) has worked in grocery stores and tax offices for as long as I can remember. They prize education, and they encouraged me to pursue it, but they do so and did so out of the belief that education leads to better jobs—that is jobs with less manual labor and higher pay than theirs. When I went to college, therefore, I went under the burden of ignorance Gerald Graff describes in his 2007 Profession piece, “Our Undemocratic Curriculum.” I did not have the kinds of connections that allowed me prior knowledge of what college would be like, and I made them only belatedly and with much difficulty. The burden shifted again when I went to graduate school and was necessarily more immersed in the political life of my home department; I had not the background to be able to negotiate office politics, coming from a home where work was less about relations with coworkers and more about relations with customers and physical manipulation of materials. It shifted again when I entered the academic workforce more fully, and with the shift, I found myself again off-balance, not entirely sure what I should be doing or how it ought to be done.

Many of the students I have taught have been in similar situations. Some have been the first in their families to attend college, or if they are not, they have been the first to have a chance at completing it. Many have been immigrants or the children of immigrants, struggling to negotiate the demands of cultures and languages not yet their own in the hopes of somehow making things better, even if they are unsure what that “better” can be. They have been pushed to go to college by the credentialing demands of the workforce, and they are constrained to enter the workforce because of the financial burden increasingly imposed by college study, so that a self-reinforcing cycle develops. Problems accrue to such a vision of education, of course; it tends to the collapsing of the intellectual endeavor to mechanistic task-completion and the reconceptualization of the instructor at any level as an automaton—a teacher-bot, as I recall quipping at one point, churning out replaceable student-cogs to maintain the devices of current productivity culture. But even in such a reductivist vision, there are unfamiliar demands made upon students but seldom or never clarified, rarely if ever made explicit. As I have completed a long course of formal study and reflected at great length on the many mistakes I made in doing so, I entertain the conceit that I have some idea of how to negotiate those demands. Conveying that understanding is no less important than conveying the content knowledge and thought-models of my courses; it does much to inform the mindsets of the disciplines I study and teach. Increasingly, I am called to pass along what I have learned about the academic environment in the hope that others will have an easier time making their own transitions and negotiating the tensions between the collegiate enterprise and their backgrounds.

How I answer the call depends in large part on the kind of class I teach. For college-preparatory and developmental coursework (and I resist the term “remedial” as indicating there is something wrong with the students in the class; they need to learn, certainly, but so do we all), in which students enroll who have been academically underserved or who have been away from schooling for many years, much opportunity to do so presents itself. Providing materials that treat the history and development of educational structures and patterns as the samples from which the students in college-preparatory courses develop their interpretive skills not only offers them the practice in reading and writing which such courses typically expect, but also offers them access to the context in which those expectations are developed and to understanding the structures to the service of which those expectations are directed. Each is something to be valued and prized, and each is something that the students I have taught in such classes have indicated appreciating. Improving not only the skills themselves but also the understanding and awareness of the contexts in which those skills are developed helps the students in college-preparatory classes develop agency with their own academic endeavors, increasing their chances of later success in their formal educations and in their lives afterwards. Passing along what I know helps them.

In first-year courses, such as the composition courses that can serve as synecdoche for the collegiate experience (per Timothy L. Carens in a 2010 College English piece, “Serpents in the Garden: English Professors in Contemporary Film and Television”) or the public speaking courses that inform no few majors, some opportunities similar to those developmental courses present emerge. In them, I can still present materials explicitly treating the history and development of academia, with much the same benefits for first-year students as for their more junior peers. That the students in such classes are presumed to be more familiar with the traditions of academia than their more junior peers offers the opportunity for such classes to more deeply explore those traditions and to interrogate them, questioning their emergence and endurance and arguing for their maintenance, adjustment, or elimination. I encourage that exploration through focusing series of writing assignments in such classes on issues of the students’ curricula, interrogating the standards that are in place and the reasons for them. Students are given more agency in their educations thereby, helping them not only to have better understandings of the structures into which they are entering but also to have more perception of authority to question and, at need, push back against those structures. My own lessons in the ability and need to resist and struggle against seemingly evident and inflexible demands were not entirely comfortable. While my classrooms may become sites of the discomfort associated with the development of new understanding, they are so only insofar as they serve to help students learn to negotiate the tensions of their backgrounds and academic establishments where they suffer minimal or no consequence for errors made in the course of that learning—something I did not have and so am called to offer to my students in turn.

In literature surveys, commonly offered at the sophomore level, answering the call to convey what I know of the academic environment is somewhat eased by the nature of the courses themselves. Many such courses concern themselves with putting across a sense of canonical works of writing, rightly or wrongly seeking to offer guiding ideas of what literature has been and can be. General literature surveys, taught under such titles as “Introduction to Literature,” often seek to ground students in basic literary criticism and close reading, working within traditional conceptions of the overarching genres of prose, poetry, and drama. Period- and nation-specific surveys taught under such names as “Survey of British Literature I” and “American Literature” often frame themselves as presenting the “great” works of their times’ or countries’ writings—usually chronologically in an attempt to portray an overall narrative of development and improvement. Genre- and sub-genre-specific courses such as surveys of poetry or introductions to fantasy literature function similarly, laying out what purport to be representative groups of works to foster fundamental understandings of what the (sub-) genres are. While there are fraught questions surrounding canonicity, and engaging them is vital, there is some value in presenting and informing a common frame of reference; if nothing else, the “great” works receive much attention and inform references, so that unfamiliarity with them hinders understanding of other writings yet. Consequently, teaching such classes presents me an opportunity to explicitly engage with presumptions of common understandings and the fulfillment of them, as well as the ethical questions associated with such presumptions; I can use the works of literature and the anthologies in which they typically appear as means to express at least some of the major cultural underpinnings of the academic world in which students work.

In more advanced writing classes, such as technical writing and advanced exposition, fewer overt opportunities to answer the call to convey useful information about how to negotiate backgrounds and the collegiate enterprise present themselves. Students in such classes are years into their collegiate careers, already steeped in understandings of how higher education works—at least at the undergraduate level. Many in such classes, however, are considering graduate school, the experience of which is wholly different from the undergraduate. In many senses, in fact, students who come from backgrounds like mine are more familiar with the kinds of demands graduate school makes than are many others; the mentor-mentee relationship at work for those pursuing masters and doctoral degrees is not unlike the apprenticeship model still prevalent in many building trades and skilled crafts. Pointing out such similarities to students has proven illuminating for many I have taught, helping some to approach their applications for graduate and professional education with better understandings and greater awareness of the rhetorical situations involved. Others, who mean to enter professions rather than continuing their formal education, perhaps benefit less directly from the comparison, but the realization of the similar contexts at work between higher levels of higher education and the working world so often considered in opposition to academia does help them to transition forward from their formal educations—and many have younger siblings who might benefit from the advice, in turn.

In private tutorial work, whether directed towards non-native speakers of English working on graduate degrees or former classroom students seeking to advance their writing and research careers, how I answer the call to address the structures of academia varies. With one tutee, one completing a doctorate and moving both into conferencing and onto the job market, I did much to relate my own experience in both arenas, not only reviewing scholarship and CV, but also noting potential problems and complications of conference presentations and job interviews. The tutee was commended at several conferences and was able to secure a faculty appointment, suggesting the value of the advice given for negotiating expectations formed from a life overseas and the demands of another aspect of the collegiate environment. Another tutee sought help adapting a paper written for a literature class I taught for presentation at an international conference—something with which the tutee, coming from a rural working-class background, was unfamiliar but at which the tutee ultimately succeeded. That tutee has since worked to write papers independently, immersing himself in an aspect of the academic environment for which his familial background offers no precedent and bespeaking a successful negotiation of the tensions between upbringing and acculturation; it is something I seek to continue doing for others as I continue to teach.

How I will answer the call to pass on what I know of the academic environment to those who seek to enter it from backgrounds that have not exposed them to it as much as others in other situations yet is unclear to me; I have not yet encountered them, so I cannot speak to them. I can, however, reassert that I will work to answer that call throughout my teaching, and that I will do so in such a way as works against a mechanistic view of education and towards one that embodies and pushes forward a love of learning I have found to be sustaining for many years.

This statement was updated 13 March 2016. The update refined treatment of first-year composition classes.

Class Reports: ENGL 1113: Composition I, Sections 025, 044, 084, and 102- 23 November 2015

Discussion asked after final thoughts about the Eval, which was to have been submitted before the beginning of class time. Distributed was a hard copy of the FinEx assignment sheet; it will be discussed during classes throughout pre-finals week. Afterwards, class was given over to completion of programmatic course evaluations.

Students are reminded of the following due dates:

  • FinEx, by section
    • Section 025, 11 December 2015, 1000-1150
    • Section 044, 11 December 2015, 1400-1550
    • Section 084, 7 December 2015, 0800-0950
    • Section 102, 9 December 2015, 1000-1150

Regarding meetings and attendance:

  • Section 025 met as scheduled, at 1030 in Engineering South 213 A. The class roster showed 16 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Ten attended, verified informally. Student participation was adequate.
  • Section 044 met as scheduled, at 1330 in Classroom Building 108. The class roster showed 18 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Fifteen attended, verified informally. Student participation was good.
  • Section 084 met as scheduled, at 0830 in Morrill Hall 306. The class roster showed 15 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Ten attended, verified informally. Student participation was adequate.
  • Section 102 met as scheduled, at 1230 in Classroom Building 221. The class roster showed 17 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Eleven attended, verified informally. Student participation was adequate.
  • Two students attended office hours. Hours were extended due to course evaluations.

Class Reports: ENGL 1113: Composition I, Sections 025, 044, 084, and 102- 20 November 2015

Discussion offered students a final opportunity to discuss issues concerning the Eval in advance of its coming due. Specifically addressed were concerns of mechanics and citation, as well as organizational structures.

Note that the readings formerly assigned to be completed before 23 November 2015 are deferred. They are to be completed before 30 November 2015. Please check the website for updates.

Students are reminded of the following due dates:

  • Eval FV, 23 November 2015 (via D2L before the beginning of class time)
  • FinEx, by section:
    • Section 025, 11 December 2015, 1000-1150
    • Section 044, 11 December 2015, 1400-1550
    • Section 084, 7 December 2015, 0800-0950
    • Section 102, 9 December 2015, 1000-1150

Regarding meetings and attendance:

  • Section 025 met as scheduled, at 1030 in Engineering South 213 A. The class roster showed 16 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Eleven attended, verified informally. Student participation was subdued.
  • Section 044 met as scheduled, at 1330 in Classroom Building 108. The class roster showed 18 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Thirteen attended, verified informally. Student participation was good.
  • Section 084 met as scheduled, at 0830 in Morrill Hall 306. The class roster showed 15 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Ten attended, verified informally. Student participation was good.
  • Section 102 met as scheduled, at 1230 in Classroom Building 221. The class roster showed 17 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Eight attended, verified informally. Student participation was subdued.
  • Seven students attended office hours.

Class Reports: ENGL 1113: Composition I, Sections 025, 044, 084, and 102- 18 November 2015

After an unfortunate interruption, discussion continued to treat the Eval. As with the previous class meeting, individual students’ issues were examined, and reflections on assigned readings were voiced. Attention was also paid to concerns of usage.

Students are reminded of the following due dates:

  • Eval FV, 23 November 2015 (via D2L before the beginning of class time)
  • FinEx (which will, per survey results, take the form of an extended riddle exercise), by section:
    • Section 025, 11 December 2015, 1000-1150
    • Section 044, 11 December 2015, 1400-1550
    • Section 084, 7 December 2015, 0800-0950
    • Section 102, 9 December 2015, 1000-1150

Regarding meetings and attendance:

  • Section 025 met as scheduled, at 1030 in Engineering South 213 A. The class roster showed 16 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Fifteen attended, verified informally. Student participation was subdued.
  • Section 044 met as scheduled, at 1330 in Classroom Building 108. The class roster showed 18 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Sixteen attended, verified informally. Student participation was good, albeit somewhat distracted–not least by the presence of an observer.
  • Section 084 met as scheduled, at 0830 in Morrill Hall 306. The class roster showed 15 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Thirteen attended, verified informally. Student participation was somewhat subdued.
  • Section 102 met as scheduled, at 1230 in Classroom Building 221. The class roster showed 17 students enrolled, unchanged since the previous report. Fifteen attended, verified informally. Student participation was adequate.
  • Four students attended office hours.