We didn’t have a specific blog prompt for this week but rather, “Write what you want to write about, just write.” Well okay then. Y’all are about to be treated to quite a bit of rambling as I work through what I want the article-length (roughly at least 5,000 words) essay draft I have to turn in by midnight tonight to say.
I wrote last week how I want to focus on audience awareness or, more accurately, the lack of it in the composition of grade school English/Language Arts curriculum. I found an article by Patricia McAlexander that discusses four subskills of audience awareness and the concept of “egocentric writing.” I can connect this to a quote from another of my sources (“It seems to be a part of human nature for us to think that everyone has had experiences similar to ours and that they share our perspective on things.”) by Donald Gallo. Of course, this isn’t true and Gallo goes on to make some wonderful points in ALL CAPS about how classic literature wasn’t written for teenage students to be dissected and analyzed and tested on but rather for educated adults who read the books because they were fun to read—points that I hope to then connect to Ede & Lunsford’s assertion that “it is only through the text, through language, that writers embody or give life to their conception of the reader.” (167). A conception that does not match the teenagers now trudging through page after page of beautifully written but completely uninteresting text to which they just
cannot relate.
Carol Berkenkotter conducted a study entitled “Understanding a Writer’s Awareness of Audience” in which she focused on the “intellectual processes that writers engage in to attain what we commonly call “audience awareness.” What I got from her study was the audience awareness of the different writers she included in her study had a significant impact on how they approached the given prompt. Similarly, “classic” authors were heavily affected by their audience. Charles Dickens (3 of whose books I begrudgingly read in high school), for example, was not only paid by the word (the result of which was two whole pages describing a man walk up a single flight of steps) but was published in serials, a new chapter each week which was fine for his intended audience but does not, in any way, match up with what contemporary teenagers want out of a novel.
Contemporary students have grown up in the most technologically stimulating period of our world’s history. They have information at their fingertips that would have taken their parents a week of waiting for the book to be shipped to their local library to get. “Whatever the type of reading, almost all kids will be more attracted to a book that grabs their attention immediately—which right away leaves out most literature.” (Gallo, 35).
I also want to include this deliciously accurate description: “Many teachers have come to acknowledge that the reality of teaching the classics is similar to the reality of trying to teach a pig to sing: It does not work and annoys the pig.” (Gibbons, Dail, & Stallworth, 53). I’m not sure where it will go but it is too vivid an image to ignore. Gibbons et al. go on to discuss the value of Young Adult Literature (which is personally one my favorite genres) in the classroom. Not only can YAL be just as literarily sophisticated and meritorious as classic novels, it has the added bonus of being something students actually want to read. When reading YAL, gone is the annoyed pig and instead is a student who actually takes pleasure in the act of reading.
Going back to that thing I said about technology, I also found articles that discusses the incorporation of new technological literacies in the English curriculum. Curwood & Cowell conducted a study in which they incorporated various media technologies into a poetry curriculum, perfecting the curriculum over the course of three years and analyzing the importance of such incorporation and the effect it had on their students. Docket, Haug & Lewis in which they developed a curriculum that “focuses primarily on media analysis and documentary film production in an English/history block that meets state and district standards for both subjects and reflects a commitment to providing students with opportunities for complex intellectual engagement.” (418). I’m going to somehow connect these two studies to the fact that, although we’ve had this technology for a while, incorporating various media platforms into the curriculum is still a rare occurrence which just doesn’t make any sense. Students today are so much more technologically savvy than curriculum developers seem prepared to admit and yet “young people’s literacy skills are not keeping pace with societal demands of living in an information age that changes rapidly and shows no sign of slowing.” (Alvermann, 189). What’s more, with the current education model, the point of academics is to provide students with the opportunity to become productive members of society and get jobs (Robinson, Changing Education Paradigms). Jobs in which they are guaranteed to utilize ever-developing technology so why doesn’t the scholastic curriculum mirror this? Makes no sense to me.
Instead, education authorities are like the stereotypical principle I mentioned last week from
Girl Meets World, completely egocentric and thoroughly convinced his way is the only right way. These people have forgotten what it was like to be a teenager. What’s worse, they’ve become so focused on making sure that students learn what they think is valuable they’ve completely forgotten one of the most important things that a student can become: a lifelong reader. Instead, teachers “have done what is expected of them (pass along a cultural/literary heritage), and making young people lifelong readers is not part of the plan.” (Bushman, 6). It’s a travesty. It is a travesty that results in declining literacy levels and America falling behind.
All of this I will then somehow connect back to the necessity of increased audience awareness on the part of education curriculum and policy makers, and not just awareness of how students react to the literature they are presented but also how they take what they’ve learned and apply it to other areas of their lives. I’m going to try to incorporate the four subskills of audience awareness discussed by McAlexander and how policy makers should follow her advice on how to increase their audience awareness. There’s also the idea that “classic” novels don’t have these subskills in relation to contemporary teens.
I also want to include somewhere in there the questions, “What are the goals of English as a core subject?” and “Why can these goals only be achieved by studying the classics?” I’m still figuring that out though.
Sources
“Ideas in Practice: Audience Awareness and Developmental Composition” by Patricia McAlexander
“How Classics Create an Aliterate Society” by Donald R. Gallo
“Audience Addressed/audience Invoked: The Role of Audience in Composition Theory and Pedagogy” by Lisa Ede & Andrea Lunsford
“Understanding a Writer's Awareness of Audience” by Carol Berkenkotter
“Young Adult Literature in the English Curriculum Today: Classroom Teachers Speak Out” by Louel C. Gibbons, Jennifer S. Dail, & B. Joyce Stallworth
“iPoetry: Creating Space for New Literacies in the English Curriculum” by Jen Scott Curwood & Lora Lee H. Cowell
“Redefining Rigor: Critical Engagement, Digital Media, and the New English/Language Arts” by Jessica Dockter, Delainia Haug & Cynthia Lewis
“Effective Literacy Instruction for Adolescents” by Donna E. Alvermann
“Changing Education Paradigms.” By Sir Ken Robinson
“Young Adult Literature in the Classroom—Or Is It?” by John H. Bushman