Readings Newsletter
Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier.
Sign in or sign up for free!
You’re not far away from qualifying for FREE standard shipping within Australia
You’ve qualified for FREE standard shipping within Australia
The cart is loading…
What do David Foster Wallace’s essay on wars over usage and Pico Iyer’s comma personification have to do with improving students’ academic writing? Everything. For all of the attention supposedly paid to Bloom’s Taxonomy-with creativity at the top-educators tend to shy away from encouraging students’ creative choices in areas where traditional analysis and the critic’s style and tone have reigned. While we do not want our students to write inane or empty verbiage, we unintentionally set them up for this inevitability–or worse.
The movement away from children’s natural creative impulses in elementary school to a direction in which they literally fit their writing into preconfigured shapes is a gradual one. Although purportedly taught to instill academic structures, these boxes are also designed to facilitate the ease with which student product may be assessed.
We need a more creative approach to teaching writing. A methodology incorporating creativity, as modeled by students in this text, demonstrates the kind of progress we are all seeking, offering an exciting challenge for young writers and educators alike.
$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout
What do David Foster Wallace’s essay on wars over usage and Pico Iyer’s comma personification have to do with improving students’ academic writing? Everything. For all of the attention supposedly paid to Bloom’s Taxonomy-with creativity at the top-educators tend to shy away from encouraging students’ creative choices in areas where traditional analysis and the critic’s style and tone have reigned. While we do not want our students to write inane or empty verbiage, we unintentionally set them up for this inevitability–or worse.
The movement away from children’s natural creative impulses in elementary school to a direction in which they literally fit their writing into preconfigured shapes is a gradual one. Although purportedly taught to instill academic structures, these boxes are also designed to facilitate the ease with which student product may be assessed.
We need a more creative approach to teaching writing. A methodology incorporating creativity, as modeled by students in this text, demonstrates the kind of progress we are all seeking, offering an exciting challenge for young writers and educators alike.