Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary...
-
date post
19-Dec-2015 -
Category
Documents
-
view
217 -
download
2
Transcript of Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary...
![Page 1: Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary Courses The 12th annual Northeast Consortium on Quantitative.](https://reader030.fdocuments.us/reader030/viewer/2022032800/56649d365503460f94a0e9d8/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in
Disciplinary Courses
The 12th annual Northeast Consortium on Quantitative Literacy (NECQL), Colby-Sawyer College, May 17, 2008.
Mya Poe ([email protected])MIT Program in Writing & Humanistic Studies
![Page 2: Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary Courses The 12th annual Northeast Consortium on Quantitative.](https://reader030.fdocuments.us/reader030/viewer/2022032800/56649d365503460f94a0e9d8/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
How do you integrate writing, speaking, quantitative reasoning in a class where . . .
• The curriculum is already packed.
• You have no release time for development of materials.
• You have few resources to help you implement your plans.
• Institutional requirements make innovation difficult.
• No support from your professional organization for innovative teaching.
![Page 3: Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary Courses The 12th annual Northeast Consortium on Quantitative.](https://reader030.fdocuments.us/reader030/viewer/2022032800/56649d365503460f94a0e9d8/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
Teaching with Writing & Numbers: Questions
What sorts of quantitative writing tasks do your students complete?
What would you like to have them doing?
What are the barriers to having your students do more of these?
![Page 4: Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary Courses The 12th annual Northeast Consortium on Quantitative.](https://reader030.fdocuments.us/reader030/viewer/2022032800/56649d365503460f94a0e9d8/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
Making changes can be big picture or local picture.
Big Picture: Changing . . .
• Professional Expectations
• Institutional requirements
• Major requirements
Local Picture: Changing . . .
• Entire course structure
• Individual assignments
• Pieces of individual assignments
![Page 5: Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary Courses The 12th annual Northeast Consortium on Quantitative.](https://reader030.fdocuments.us/reader030/viewer/2022032800/56649d365503460f94a0e9d8/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
The Big Picture
![Page 6: Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary Courses The 12th annual Northeast Consortium on Quantitative.](https://reader030.fdocuments.us/reader030/viewer/2022032800/56649d365503460f94a0e9d8/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
Does your profession recognize the importance of quantitative writing?
• Do accreditation standards mention writing (e.g., ABET)?
• Are there places for publishing about quantitative writing in your discipline?
• What is your profession’s identity towards writing?
• Who teaches writing?
![Page 7: Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary Courses The 12th annual Northeast Consortium on Quantitative.](https://reader030.fdocuments.us/reader030/viewer/2022032800/56649d365503460f94a0e9d8/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
MIT’s Communication Requirement integrates instruction and practice in writing and speaking into all four years and across all parts of MIT's undergraduate program.
Undergraduates take two CI classes in the humanities, arts, or social sciences, and two CI classes in their majors, usually laboratory classes.
http://web.mit.edu/wac/
![Page 8: Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary Courses The 12th annual Northeast Consortium on Quantitative.](https://reader030.fdocuments.us/reader030/viewer/2022032800/56649d365503460f94a0e9d8/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
Repeated exposure
Pro
ficie
ncy
test
ing
![Page 9: Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary Courses The 12th annual Northeast Consortium on Quantitative.](https://reader030.fdocuments.us/reader030/viewer/2022032800/56649d365503460f94a0e9d8/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
• Background Assumptions
• Mastery of communication skills is essential.
• No single subject can meet all of the goals of the Communication Requirement. Teaching of communication is shared by faculty across Schools, departments, and majors.
• Communication skills develop over time and requires active participation; no single subject can give students what they need to become competent communicators.
• Students improve as communicators by engaging in a process of planning, practicing, receiving feedback, and revising.
• Performance will vary with the student’s aptitude, intellectual maturity and motivation, and the nature of the assignment.
• Communication, especially writing and speaking, enables us to formulate, clarify, and promote our ideas, and to have an impact on the world at large.
• Although it may be beyond the formal scope of this Requirement, we recognize that communication goes beyond writing and speaking. Effective communication is complex process and can include the ability to persuade, coordinate, negotiate, strategize, manage, lead, and even inspire.
![Page 10: Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary Courses The 12th annual Northeast Consortium on Quantitative.](https://reader030.fdocuments.us/reader030/viewer/2022032800/56649d365503460f94a0e9d8/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
Can you build a writing sequence into the major?
Introduction to Scientific
Writing
Quantitative Physiology
Bio Eng Design
1st Year:
Humanities-based tech
writing
3rd Year:
Focus on data
4th Year:
Focus on design and IP issues
Graduate School
Focus on scientific
writing in a professional community
CI elective Humanities
2nd Year:
Humanities course
![Page 11: Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary Courses The 12th annual Northeast Consortium on Quantitative.](https://reader030.fdocuments.us/reader030/viewer/2022032800/56649d365503460f94a0e9d8/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
The Local Picture
![Page 12: Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary Courses The 12th annual Northeast Consortium on Quantitative.](https://reader030.fdocuments.us/reader030/viewer/2022032800/56649d365503460f94a0e9d8/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
Do you revise an existing course or create a new course?
• As your professional goals change, so should your teaching.
• Go back to your learning goals for the course.• Not every course you teach has to “a major production”
in writing instruction. Small is good.
![Page 13: Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary Courses The 12th annual Northeast Consortium on Quantitative.](https://reader030.fdocuments.us/reader030/viewer/2022032800/56649d365503460f94a0e9d8/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
In redesigning a course, it’s helpful to map high stakes and low stakes activities.
= formal review
Final report or proposal
= mentoring session= individual writing
= team briefing
= dry run= rough draft
Key
Courtesy of Jennifer Craig
High Stakes
Low Stakes
![Page 14: Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary Courses The 12th annual Northeast Consortium on Quantitative.](https://reader030.fdocuments.us/reader030/viewer/2022032800/56649d365503460f94a0e9d8/html5/thumbnails/14.jpg)
Challenge Proposal Proposal Review
Lab Draft Report
Tech Review
Writing Review
Peer Review
Meet at “writing clinic” with
reviewers
Revise Report
Submit Final
Proposallecture
Reportlecture
Making a flow chart is helpful in considering revision cycles and timing.
Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week x?
![Page 15: Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary Courses The 12th annual Northeast Consortium on Quantitative.](https://reader030.fdocuments.us/reader030/viewer/2022032800/56649d365503460f94a0e9d8/html5/thumbnails/15.jpg)
• Muddy cards• PRS—write about data• Misconception checks• Peer review: pairs, groups,
rotisserie• In-class drafting: 2 minute
paper• low stakes writing: “getting
meta”
Formative assessment is a good way to add quantitative writing to a single assignment.
![Page 16: Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary Courses The 12th annual Northeast Consortium on Quantitative.](https://reader030.fdocuments.us/reader030/viewer/2022032800/56649d365503460f94a0e9d8/html5/thumbnails/16.jpg)
Are your barriers big picture or local picture issues?
Institutionally, where do those barriers “live”
What information do you need to overcome those barriers?
![Page 17: Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary Courses The 12th annual Northeast Consortium on Quantitative.](https://reader030.fdocuments.us/reader030/viewer/2022032800/56649d365503460f94a0e9d8/html5/thumbnails/17.jpg)
Some specific tips on writing feedback
• Teach students how to receive and give feedback.
• Contradictory feedback can be good.• Do not edit student writing.• 1 hr. commenting vs 15 min. conference?• Electronic commenting• Work with Writing Center. • Enrich your language to describe writing.• Beyond rubrics! try low stakes feedback:
sayback, 3-questions, roll-your-own trait analysis
![Page 18: Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary Courses The 12th annual Northeast Consortium on Quantitative.](https://reader030.fdocuments.us/reader030/viewer/2022032800/56649d365503460f94a0e9d8/html5/thumbnails/18.jpg)
Lessons learned
• Look to the big picture. Where do you want your program to be in 5 years?
• Look internationally• Emphasize faculty “buy in.”• Professionalize the view towards
teaching quantitative writing.• Look for allies in strange places.
• Iteration in change • Keep instruction short and practice long.• Start with smaller modules rather than
larger ones. • Individualize to fit course, department,
institutional objectives.
Mayan wordla-ja (laj) > tr. v. "to end, finish."
![Page 19: Making Time for it All: Integrating Writing, Speaking, and Quantitative Reasoning in Disciplinary Courses The 12th annual Northeast Consortium on Quantitative.](https://reader030.fdocuments.us/reader030/viewer/2022032800/56649d365503460f94a0e9d8/html5/thumbnails/19.jpg)