Your students might learn more.You’d like to assign more writing in your classes, but how on earth would you grade it all? According to many experienced writing teachers, the answer is simple: don’t. Or rather, don’t grade all of it.
Many instructors whose courses depend on writing have concluded it’s
not necessary to grade every piece of written work students produce. In
fact, students often learn more when their writing isn’t graded.
Assignments not meant to be graded, usually referred to as “low-stakes”
writing, can include: - journals
- responses to readings or class discussions
- peer commentary on first drafts
- mini essays or “micro-themes”
- dea-generating techniques such as freewriting or brainstorming.
Low-stakes assignments can serve a variety of purposes. First,
they allow you to judge how well students understand course material;
by asking your class to write answers to a few questions about a
reading or compose a journal entry summarizing a lecture, you get a
quick snapshot of the students’ comprehension. Such writing can even be
done in class. Low-stakes assignments also help you introduce
students to forms of writing specific to your discipline. Low-stakes
assignments in a new genre provide a welcome chance for students to
practice before having to demonstrate their ability for a grade.
Students also are more likely to experiment with style and tone or
explore unfamiliar content when there’s no grade hanging over them. This
type of writing work gives you a general sense of a class’s strengths
and weaknesses as writers. Do the majority of your students know how to
narrow a thesis statement or integrate quotations from their research
into their own paragraphs? If not, you can spend class time reinforcing
those concepts. Finally, such assignments provide an opportunity
for students to generate topics for longer, graded assignments. You
might ask students to try idea-generating techniques, such as
freewriting or brainstorming, to see which best suits them. But
if an assignment isn’t graded will students bother to do it? Maybe not,
which is why some instructors award points for completion of such
assignments, in lieu of, or as part of, a class participation grade.
Instructors may also elect to comment very briefly—a question or two in
the margins, for instance—to let students know their work is being
reviewed. Others ask students to swap papers with
classmates—sometimes so they can offer comments, but sometimes simply
to give students a chance to see the work of their classroom
“colleagues.” Can low-stakes writing be assigned in a W course? “Absolutely,”
says Dr. Valerie Balester, Executive Director of the University Writing
Center and Chair of the W Course Advisory Committee. “According to the
suggested guidelines for a 3-credit- hour W course, about 2000 words—or
8 pages—should be graded, finished writing. That should still provide
plenty of opportunity for low-stakes work.” “The established
criteria,” Balester continues, “also require W course instructors to
provide writing instruction. Low-stakes assignments—such as having
students experiment with a new writing style or offer peer comments on
one another’s first drafts—are great opportunities for hands-on writing
instruction. “Also, those kinds of assignments mesh perfectly
with one of the key ideas behind the W courses—namely that writing
improves with practice.” For more information on low-stakes
assignments, visit the University Writing Center’s website at
http://uwc.tamu.edu. Under the Faculty heading, you’ll find a Pedagogy
section on low-stakes assignments.
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