Thursday, August 1, 2019
Inventing the University
Many beginner or introductory writers are strangers to academic discourse; they do not have the understanding of the principles and logic needed to devise scholarly compositions. Thus, throughout various universities, students are assembling and mimicking the discourses taught by knowledgeable educators, ultimately trying to successfully write for a variety of diverse audiences (Bartholomae 61).Students intuitively understand that they need to reproduce a similar composition in order to gain acceptance in the academic community and to succeed in their coursework. Unfortunately, he or she does not have the knowledge necessary to complete the assignments. David Bartholomae defines ââ¬Å"Inventing the Universityâ⬠as writing processes that college students must undertake each time they create a new composition. He has described the essential reason for making the comprehension of academic discourse the primary component of any first-year writing class.In his essay, Bartholomae off ers insights that could aid college composition teachers in understanding the difficulty beginner students without prior exposure to academic discourse may encounter when trying to write university level writing coursework. Essentially, students must learn to abandon their old discourse communities, use authoritative roles in their papers and use a special vocabulary to become great scholars.David Bartholomae is a leading Professor at the University of Pittsburgh; he is a revolutionary scholar and expert of composition studies. Bartholomae has challenged his profession to observe more intensely, and think more self-critically about what happens when people write and read. His vision of literacy is comprehensive and rational; he has transformed the way teachers think about students which has caused many universities and colleges to modify practices that have needed improvement for a long time.His primary research interests are in composition, literacy, pedagogy; his work engages lear ning in language and in American literature and studies. His thoughts and visions are based on Aristotelian philosophy. Students have entered many discourse communities throughout their lives that have shaped their writing styles and language patterns. Basic writersââ¬â¢ problems when entering college is they ââ¬Å"face a clash, not of dialects but of discourse formsâ⬠(Bizzel 295).There are many students from different countries and social classes that come to universities with different abilities to deal with academic discourse. In order for students to effectively reproduce compositions, they need to abandon their previous discourse communities with the help and knowledge of professors. According to Bartholomaeââ¬â¢s paradigm, educators are empowered with the responsibility of introducing students to a set of codes and conventions that will allow beginning writers to enter into a new and allegedly empowering, discourse community (67).An important task of an educator i s to ââ¬Å"pry looseâ⬠the scholar from their previous discourse community to which he or she had been a part of prior to entering the university (Bartholomae 83). Bartholomae describes these communities as structured by the ââ¬Å"naiveâ⬠codes of ââ¬Å"everyday' life,â⬠and he asserts that we must replace them with ââ¬Å"the peculiar ways of knowing, selecting, evaluating, reporting, concluding, and arguing that define the discourse of our communityâ⬠(79, 60).Contrastingly, Harris argues that the role as teachers should not be ââ¬Å"to initiate our students into the values and practices of some new community, but to offer them a chance to reflect critically on those discourses ââ¬â of home, school, work, the media and the like ââ¬â to which they already belongâ⬠(19). As a fourth year university student, I have taken many literature classes, and by observing many struggling students, I believe that Bartholomaeââ¬â¢s arguments are accurate. Students need to conform to the universitiesââ¬â¢ discourse community to properly compose writing assignments and be proven successful in the course.Many students are penalized for not appropriating a privileged discourse. First year writers have difficulty adopting an authoritative voice in their writing assignments. Writing with authority isn't a matter of correct grammar; it is a prose that displays enough skill and professionalism that it convinces the reader that the author has a purpose to his or her writing. It is important for authors to be comfortable with the audience and to ensure that readersââ¬â¢ expectations are met.Bartholomae explains ââ¬Å"To speak with authority [students] have to speak not only in anotherââ¬â¢s voice but through anotherââ¬â¢s code; and they not only have to do this, they have to speak in the voice and through the codes of those of us with power and wisdomâ⬠¦ â⬠(78). Writers only gain authority when their arguments can be rel ated to those of other critics (Gaipa 419). A studentââ¬â¢s argument can be cogent and engaging, but it will lack authority ââ¬Å"until its author clarifies [his or her] contribution to a larger critical communityâ⬠(419).Despite having four years experience in academic writing, establishing authority and creating a purpose for various audiences continues to be an exceptionally complex task to achieve. Many hours are spent revising and modifying compositions to generate an academic essay that reaches the professorââ¬â¢s expectations. Most native-speakers of the English language come to a University or College with a vocabulary of approximately twenty thousand words. Generally, students will be taught more than one thousand new words every year from academic writing.Undergraduateââ¬â¢s discover that creating academic composition requires the use of ââ¬Å"professional languageâ⬠and a ââ¬Å"specializedâ⬠vocabulary (Graff and Birkenstein 116,119) However, st udents should not use complex wording in there essays unless the terminology is clear and completely understood. Essays require ââ¬Å"correct and complete understanding of the meaning of their vocabulary in order for the reader to process their intellectual substanceâ⬠(Stotsky 318) Writers need to learn that ââ¬Å"what they say (the code) is more important than what they meant(the intention)â⬠(Bartholomae 77).I think students underestimate the importance of language used within a composition. Many words are overused by scholars or too difficult for readers to comprehend. To conclude, in order to gain familiarity with scholarly discourse, imitation is essential for the beginner and basic writers. Students continuously struggle with establishing an authoritative voice and satisfying syntactical standards to the teachersââ¬â¢ expectations, therefore continuous practice is necessary.It is to the students benefit to abandon their prior discourse community and engage in th e universityââ¬â¢s academia. Ultimately, to become successful authors, students must follow a teacherââ¬â¢s examples and examine their preferable writing styles and techniques. Bibliography Bartholomae, David. ââ¬Å"Inventing the Universityâ⬠. Writing on the Margins: Essays on Composition and Teaching. New York: Bedford/St. Martinââ¬â¢s, 2005. Print. Bizzel, Patricia. ââ¬Å"What Happens When Basic Writers Come to College? â⬠College Composition and Communication 37, 1986. 294-301. Web. Nov 30. 2009.Gaipa, Mark. â⬠Breaking into the Conversation: How Students Can Acquire Authority for Their Writingâ⬠Pedagogy 4, 2004. 419-437. Web. 23 Nov. 2009. Graff, G and Birkenstein, C. They Say I say: The Moves That Matter in Academic Writing. New York, NY: W. W,Norton & Company, 2006. Print. Harris, Joseph. ââ¬Å"The Idea of Community in the Study of Writingâ⬠College Composition and Communications 40, 1989. 11-22. Web. 25 Nov. 2009. Stotsky, Sandra. ââ¬Å"T he Vocabulary of Essay Writing: Can It Be Taught? â⬠College Composition and Communication 32, 1981. 317-326. Web. 27 Nov. 2009.
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