Part Six of an ongoing series. Catch up with part One here.
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This
is an intensive writing course. You will have writing homework every night and reading homework many
nights. The theme of this course is taste
– what you like, what other people like, how we define ourselves according to
our likes and dislikes, and how we articulate these preferences. We will be
examining the rhetoric of taste, as well as writing about how tastes are shaped
by environment and culture. By investigating issues surrounding taste – good
taste, bad taste and everything in between – we will be able to explore ideas
of genre, audience, and persuasion that are central to the writing you will be
expected to perform in this class as well as throughout your college career.
I taught college
composition from the Fall of 2012 to the Summer of 2014. Freshman comp,
compulsory general education requirement. My time teaching the subject was
split between two courses, UWP 1 and ENL 3. UWP stands for University Writing
Program, the department that administers the bulk of writing education on
campus. ENL stands for English.
The two courses
teach the same thing. My lesson plans in terms of writing education remained
largely unchanged between them. UWP isn’t a “literature” course in the way most
students are expecting – there’s still reading, but the course description
specifically excludes fiction, plays, and poetry. Some degree of self-selection
is anticipated, with students migrating to their preference. In reality the
requirement is impacted to the degree that students land in one or the other
class by virtue of scheduling. Everyone needs it – most students need very
badly to become better writers – but freshman composition is nobody’s favorite. I accept that and
try to make the topic interesting for students who may have very good reasons
to dislike writing.