Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Memo #4 Update: Teacher Interview


This morning I was able to meet with my former teacher, Mrs. Y.  After catching up with each other, we set to work.  I explained my complete idea for the project and shared the data I have collected so far.  She explained to me that studies have shown that almost 60% of students entering community colleges are severely under-prepared for college writing courses.  These statistics confirm what my research has led me to believe: writing instruction in primary and secondary schools is sorely lacking.  Mrs. Y told me that she has had college writing students who have never heard of the writing process.  They were essentially given diagrams for 5 paragraph essays and told to fill them out.  This led to the topic of students being unprepared for standardized test essays due to a lack of foundation in their skills. 

 
Students who have not been taught to embrace any room for error in their writing at the most basic level are unable to perform in highly stressful situations.  It is her professional opinion that students must be taught to embrace the hard work and mistakes they will encounter when writing.  If they are not, they will become discouraged, considering themselves to be “bad” at writing.  This lack of self-esteem in their creative process will only be detrimental to their academic careers.  She encouraged me, as a future teacher, to help my students find their angle—aid them in their discovery to find how they can approach a project in a personal way so every writing assignment holds importance to them. 

 
Hearing all of this from someone whose opinion I greatly value was very encouraging.  It makes me feel as if I may be on the right track for this project and my professional career.  Furthermore, she has offered to ask her students to fill out my questionnaire so I have more data to work with.  She said I should expect about 35 of them.  This, in itself, is incredible.  I will be able to access data from a broad range of students and use it to help me in my final project.  Once I receive the questionnaires from her, I will report back here with another update on my findings.

1 comment:

  1. It is interesting how most students were never taught how to accept errors in their writing. It's so true, at one point of my life I felt like crap if I saw mistakes in my writing. I'm happy that I've matured and can now understand that improvement comes from mistakes.

    I think I will teach my students that mistakes are okay in writing :)

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