Readings about FYW
4 You Can Learn to Write in General
Elizabeth Wardle
Although the purpose of a first-year writing class is ostensibly to teach you how to write in college, there is no way to teach anyone to write in all situations. Instead, a first-year writing course asks faculty and students to understand writing situations and the best way to approach different situations. This is the argument of Elizabeth Wardle’s essay from Bad Ideas About Writing: “You Can Learn to Write in General.”
Read Elizabeth Wardle’s “You Can Learn to Write in General.”
Listen to Kyle Stedman’s audio version of this text.
Keywords from this chapter in Bad Ideas about Writing
dispositions, genre conventions, genre, literacy, transfer
Author Bio from Bad Ideas about Writing
Elizabeth Wardle is Howe Professor of English and Director of the Roger and Joyce Howe Center for Writing Excellence at Miami University (Oxford, OH). She has directed the writing program at the University of Central Florida and the University of Dayton, experiences that have contributed to her ongoing interest in how learners use and transfer prior knowledge about writing, and how courses and programs can best help students learn to write more effectively. She regularly gives talks and workshops around the U.S. on how threshold concepts and knowledge about writing and knowledge transfer can be used to strengthen writing courses and programs.
prevailing tendency, mood, or inclination; the tendency of something to act in a certain manner under given circumstances
the norms and expectations (or similarities) of a genre
often thought of as a type or category of writing, e.g. business memos, organization charts, menus, book reviews; a discursive response to a recurrent, social action; materials that mediate social interaction
the quality, condition, or state of being literate; the ability to read, write, speak; the ability to ‘read’ a specified subject or medium; competence or knowledge in a particular area
the act of bringing knowledge or skills from one context to another; the goal of a first-year writing course is to transfer the writing skills developed in the class to other writing situations