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to Table of Contents for More Strategies INTRODUCTION: In the fall term, I teach writing in a learning community that links College Composition 1 and U.S. History 1. The first history homework is reading the prologue to James West Davidson and Mark Hamilton’s book “After the Fact: The Art of Historical Detection,” which Sam, the history prof, has placed on reserve. In this intriguing teaser, the authors explore an unsolved historical mystery, “The Strange Death of Silas Deane,” to illustrate that history is not merely what happened. The first composition homework is fastwriting a 500-word summary-response essay on the “Strange Death” piece. In past years, I’ve observed students struggling to understand the prologue and articulate its message about the nature of history. The three-paragraph introduction merely hints at a thesis, and many students get off track. The somewhat-cryptic thesis doesn’t appear until the very end of the piece. While I’ve always helped students navigate this maze with pre-writing and post-writing discussion, I’ve been dissatisfied with the results. So I created “The Pre-Reading Throwdown.” Suitable for any course—sociology, mathematics, ESL, biology, reading, philosophy, orientation, engineering—this activity helps students anticipate issues they’ll face in reading a challenging assignment and nudges them towards the practice of reading more attentively. I used the “Throwdown” on the first day, but the 40-minute activity can be used anytime. PURPOSE
SUPPLIES/SETUP
DIRECTIONS 1. Introduce the reading assignment, acknowledge its potential difficulties, and explain the purpose of the in-class activity: to help students prepare to read successfully. 2. Invite students to form groups of four (or five). 3. Hand out copies of the reading or invite students to find it in their book. 4. Hand out the instructions (see SUPPORT MATERIALS) and invite students to follow them. 5. During the group work, keep an eye out for questions or problems, yet allow students to find their own way. 6. When it appears groups are finished, invite each spokesperson to report to the class. 7. After reports, ask the class “So what is history?” (or whatever question seems appropriate for the reading at hand). An alternative is to ask each student to take five minutes to write an answer. 8. Optional: Invite students to write their reflections on the activity. EXPERIENCES Students embraced the task and persisted actively. One group, though completing the assigned work, admitted apologetically that they spent much time exploring nuances of meaning and potential misreadings in just the first paragraph. I smiled and applauded their curiosity. The whole class demonstrated attentiveness and interactivity that thrilled Sam and me. After the “Throwdown,” the old curmudgeon whispered, “That worked great.” Of course, the proof is in the pie, preferably rhubarb. While delighted with the groups, I was less than thrilled with the group reports. Two groups of five reported their detection of no possible misreadings. Two groups reported two. One group reported three. I learned from questions asked during the group sessions and from talking with students later that a few students weren’t sure what “misread” means. During the group work, I overheard a student declare, “Okay, so we know history is more than just what happened in the past, but we don’t yet know what more is, right?” Later, she said, “Okay, guys, let’s get back on task.” In another group I overheard, “Why don’t these guys just say what they mean?” In yet another, a young man called me over: “We understand the introduction just fine, but we’re having a hard time picking out ways to misread it.” I replied, “Consider the first sentence of the second paragraph: ‘History is what happened in the past’.” (In the piece it has quotation marks.) He said, “Well, it’s got quotation marks because it’s not true. It’s what a lot of people mistakenly think history is.” Sam and I enjoyed seeing such intense interaction and productivity on the first day, especially given the focus on first assignments for history and comp. No one stared at the wall. Several weeks later, when I asked Sam about that first day, he said, “I can’t imagine a better way to start the class and get them involved in the history and writing.” OUTCOMES Each spokesperson’s oral summary of the prologue’s introduction was thoughtful and instructive, really quite good for the first day of a college class, especially given an introduction that implies rather than states its thesis. (The actual thesis doesn’t appear until the very end of the long prologue, which they had yet to complete.) I feel certain the activity helped prepare students to read the assigned piece and fastwrite their summary-response essays. Their 500-word fastwrites, submitted the next class period, showed considerably more grasp of the “Strange Death” prologue than such fastwrites from previous years. The exceptional quality of thought may have stemmed in part from their being such capable fledgling students. I also feel certain the activity helped plunge students into meaningful group work, which is essential for success in my writing courses. They appeared to work productively together, and their responses on the survey (below) indicate such. A few weeks into the term I administered a survey. It invited students (1) to rate, on a scale of one to five, the usefulness of the first-day group work on “Silas Deane” in helping prepare them to understand the reading and complete the fastwrite successfully, (2) to explain their rating; (3) to explain what history is not and what it is; (4) to rate, on a scale of one to five, the usefulness of the group work on “Silas Deane” in helping them get to know one another; and (5) to explain their rating. One student was absent for the survey, and one had not been present on the first day of class. Of the twelve who completed the survey, nine gave either four or five on the two rating questions, indicating their support for the activity as a useful preparation for reading “Silas Deane” and writing about it, and for working together. Here are four students’ comments explaining their ratings:
LESSONS LEARNED The “Throwdown” produced tasty apple pie but not quite rhubarb. I’ve already tweaked the written instructions (below). I’ve defined the word “misread.” And when I do the activity again, I’ll prep students more fully by demonstrating how unintentional misreading is integral to the reading process—how as active readers, we anticipate a certain meaning and then, reading further, correct our inaccurate guesses or confirm our accurate guesses. I’ve also added a step inviting the groups to read the three paragraphs silently, to establish context, before reading each paragraph aloud and then commenting on each sentence and the whole. Perhaps they’ll notice and later tell the group how they anticipated a certain meaning and then corrected or confirmed it. To construct meaning for each paragraph and for the three paragraphs together, students needed to concentrate. Their deliberate search for possible misreadings perhaps distracted them. Even so, I continue to subscribe to this the two-pronged approach, because it helps them see the challenges college readers face and the sinkholes they’ll often wander into and drag themselves up out of (while trying not to end sentences with prepositions except for intended effect). SUPPORT MATERIALS The Pre-Reading Throwdown Purposes: To help you prepare to read
“The Strange Death of Silas Deane” (for history) and complete your
summary-response fastwrite (for comp). To help you get to know one another. To
provide experience working in a group. To help you develop your ability to read
attentively. GROUPS OF 4 (or 5) 1. Introduce yourself briefly to your group. 2. Select your group’s facilitator, who
invites participation and keeps the work going. 3. Select your group’s notemaker-spokesperson. 4. Invite everyone to read the
three-paragraph introduction silently. 5. Paragraph 1 a. Invite a volunteer to
read the paragraph aloud. b. Invite a volunteer to
explain the meaning of sentence one as well as ways, if any, that it can be
misread (taken the wrong way). c. Invite other group
members to add their thoughts. d. The note taker writes
down each way, if any, that the sentence might be misconstrued.
e. And so on, sentence by
sentence, to the end of paragraph one. 6. Paragraph 2: Same process as for
paragraph one. 7. Paragraph 3: Same process as for
paragraph one and two. 8. As a group, reach consensus (group agreement) on the overall meaning of the three paragraphs together. Also reach consensus on the probable thesis (main idea, claim) of the prologue. 9. The note taker writes this overall meaning and the probable thesis of the prologue in no more than three sentences. WHOLE CLASS Each group’s spokesperson, addressing the class, (1) reads the group’s consensus on the overall meaning of the three-paragraph introduction as well as the probable thesis and (2) explains how any sentences or paragraphs might be taken the wrong way. --Dick Harrington, Faculty, English
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