Putting Professors into the FYW Classroom
In the most recent issue of Inside Higher Education William Major, associate professor of English at Hillyer College of the University of Hartford, has an article entitled "Teaching Composition: A Reconsideration." Addressing the question often posed by our colleagues in other departments (and even sometimes in our own) of why our students can’t write, Major asks questions that he describes as "more practical, if not more overtly political: Why is the teaching of writing so readily given over to the novitiate? If writing is that important as a university and life skill, why do we assign its teaching to graduate students and part-time instructors? Where are the associate and full professors of English, for it is exceedingly difficult to find them in writing classroom?"
He is not suggesting, he hastens to assure us, "that teaching assistants and part-timers are incompetent or careless; perhaps no one in the English department works harder, save for the staff. And there’s little doubt that the composition classroom is the best training for the part-time grunt work that often follows the Ph.D. in English. Even today - after more than 20 years of empty promises - the dirty little secret that doesn’t often make it to graduate orientation is that a large number of doctors of philosophy will be stuck in part-time employment fixing thesis statements and correcting schizophrenic syntax."
We all know why this happens, he says: "Graduate students and adjuncts are cheap labor. They fill untold numbers of sections and receive minuscule pay and laughable benefits, if any." But why do English departments not only tolerate this situation but actively perpetuate it, even like it? Why is teaching writing "work for the masses - graduate students, adjuncts, and those oddballs in rhetoric and comp" - and teaching literature is for the elite? "Since when did writing become anathema? If writing is so important that virtually every student at nearly every college and university must take at least one composition course (and usually two), why aren’t more professors of English teaching it?"
Well, obviously: "The English professor rarely teaches freshman writing courses because it is beneath her to have to worry over catchy introductions, pithy thesis statements, and thoughtful conclusions. Certainly she cannot be bothered by grammar and form, except briefly and in passing. There is a workman-like quality to the teaching of writing; it is as close to blue-collar as you can get in the liberal arts classroom."
Major also mentions with excitement and enthusiasm a post to Stanley Fish’s New York Times blog (presumably this op-ed piece from May 31, 2005), saying that if Stanley Fish enjoys teaching writing, perhaps there’s hope. (But see the reactions to Fish's insistence that the writing classroom should be "devoid of content" from rhet/comp bloggers like Steve Krause and Jeff Rice.)
Major then launches into his utopian conclusion:
I'm not sure this scenario is the best possible future for English departments in this country - do literature professors really make better FYW instructors than our current grad students and adjuncts? do we really need to cut back Ph.D.-production by a factor of what, 10? 20? 50? what happens to research, the construction of new knowledge, if teaching loads are increased to meet this new need at R1 universities? - but I think Major's article is extremely useful nonetheless. It may be utopian to reimagine the delivery of writing instruction in something like this fashion for the simple reason that the economic pressures are against this sort of change; but it is still an extremely useful thought-experiment to crumple up what we're doing now and rebuild it from scratch. What should the role of writing and writing instruction be in higher education? What kinds of resources do need to be devoted to it (them)? What kind of departmental division would best serve our students' need to be able to write? Shouldn't we really have colleges of writing, with departments of first-year writing, business writing, legal writing, technical writing, and so on? Some universities have created colleges of "the arts and communication," with departments of writing studies or rhetoric or professional communication thrown in with theater arts and theater management, design studies, arts and arts management, and so on; but if writing is as important as everyone says it is, do writing programs really need to be thrown in with the arts to make up a full college?
He is not suggesting, he hastens to assure us, "that teaching assistants and part-timers are incompetent or careless; perhaps no one in the English department works harder, save for the staff. And there’s little doubt that the composition classroom is the best training for the part-time grunt work that often follows the Ph.D. in English. Even today - after more than 20 years of empty promises - the dirty little secret that doesn’t often make it to graduate orientation is that a large number of doctors of philosophy will be stuck in part-time employment fixing thesis statements and correcting schizophrenic syntax."
We all know why this happens, he says: "Graduate students and adjuncts are cheap labor. They fill untold numbers of sections and receive minuscule pay and laughable benefits, if any." But why do English departments not only tolerate this situation but actively perpetuate it, even like it? Why is teaching writing "work for the masses - graduate students, adjuncts, and those oddballs in rhetoric and comp" - and teaching literature is for the elite? "Since when did writing become anathema? If writing is so important that virtually every student at nearly every college and university must take at least one composition course (and usually two), why aren’t more professors of English teaching it?"
Well, obviously: "The English professor rarely teaches freshman writing courses because it is beneath her to have to worry over catchy introductions, pithy thesis statements, and thoughtful conclusions. Certainly she cannot be bothered by grammar and form, except briefly and in passing. There is a workman-like quality to the teaching of writing; it is as close to blue-collar as you can get in the liberal arts classroom."
Major also mentions with excitement and enthusiasm a post to Stanley Fish’s New York Times blog (presumably this op-ed piece from May 31, 2005), saying that if Stanley Fish enjoys teaching writing, perhaps there’s hope. (But see the reactions to Fish's insistence that the writing classroom should be "devoid of content" from rhet/comp bloggers like Steve Krause and Jeff Rice.)
Major then launches into his utopian conclusion:
At the very least, full professors of English belong in the composition classroom because they might learn a thing or two about writing themselves. Moreover, the benefits to those students who will not see a professor their first year could be intangible. They would understand that we in the university take writing seriously enough that someone with gravitas and experience is teaching it. They would benefit from close contact with instructors who are not looking to move up or into the more ethereal realm of literature, those who believe that strong, clear writing is as essential as oxygen.
There could be other structural and institutional benefits. Might we see smaller Ph.D. programs because there is less need for composition instructors and because the professors are more fully engaged with undergraduate education? Might we have fewer doctorates awarded? A meaningful loosening of the job market? Imagine a world where positions teaching literature and composition are actually available for the professionals we graduate from our programs.
I'm not sure this scenario is the best possible future for English departments in this country - do literature professors really make better FYW instructors than our current grad students and adjuncts? do we really need to cut back Ph.D.-production by a factor of what, 10? 20? 50? what happens to research, the construction of new knowledge, if teaching loads are increased to meet this new need at R1 universities? - but I think Major's article is extremely useful nonetheless. It may be utopian to reimagine the delivery of writing instruction in something like this fashion for the simple reason that the economic pressures are against this sort of change; but it is still an extremely useful thought-experiment to crumple up what we're doing now and rebuild it from scratch. What should the role of writing and writing instruction be in higher education? What kinds of resources do need to be devoted to it (them)? What kind of departmental division would best serve our students' need to be able to write? Shouldn't we really have colleges of writing, with departments of first-year writing, business writing, legal writing, technical writing, and so on? Some universities have created colleges of "the arts and communication," with departments of writing studies or rhetoric or professional communication thrown in with theater arts and theater management, design studies, arts and arts management, and so on; but if writing is as important as everyone says it is, do writing programs really need to be thrown in with the arts to make up a full college?


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