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Using Online Role-plays to Teach Argumentative Writing
Richard Beach
NCState New Literacies workshop
Slideshare:
Formulating arguments using online role-play/games
• Select an issue• Formulate a primary argument• Choose roles and conduct research• Post arguments on a blog or online
forum• Step out of roles and reflect
Collaborative arguments: (May, 2011, English Journal)
• Test out different argumentso"House": determine alternative diagnoses
• Find common ground to develop solutions
Through online role-play, students learn to:
construct a persona
employ rhetorical appeals
support their position with reasons
identify and refute counter-arguments
revise or modify one’s own positions
Selecting an issue
Selecting an issue with possible opposing positions versus a “one-sided” issue
Question: What contentious issues could you use that would engage students?
Context: issues: literaryworlds.org
Censorship: The Perks of Being a Wallflower
http://schooledthewriteway.blogspot.com/http://wallfloweronline.blogspot.com/http://charactershighschool.pbworks.com/The PTSA (Parent Teacher Student Association) of Maui High School is looking for feedback on the following book titles available to students through the school library and/or taught by the English department. Several parents and guardians have contacted school administrators about the questionable content and educational merit of these and other books.
Issue: Blocking websites in schools
Tension: Access to sites for learning
Legal protection of students from porn/problematic sites
Identifying tensions between policies and practices
Today I was attempting to do some research for our next Youth Against War and Racism meeting and I came upon a school Block when I was looking for Abu Ghraib, and SURPRISE! It’s Blocked. It’s blocked for Obscene/Tasteless content. Do you know what I find Obscene and Tasteless? The idea that a school has a right to hide things from students. Are we communists that we are going to restrict what our students can know?
Social bookmarking: Diigo.com
• Set up Groups based on classes• Students share bookmarks to the class• Students tag bookmarks• Students annotate online texts/sites using
sticky notes
Use of Diigo: Online role-play• Sharing sites related to the topic of violence and video games• Supporting evidence: Links and sticky note comments
Using Diigo sticky notes to reflect on a role-play
http://grou.ps/cwhybrid2010t1/talks/5160010/4
Email from Diigo group
Using a Ning as the platform for online role-play:
Threaded discussion allows students easily follow discussion
Students use their role to create an arguments and use hyperlinks
Students use the bio pages and comments sections to personally connect to other characters.
Bubbl.us mapping to identify roles and relationships between roles
Role construction: Adopting different perspectivesEmoGirl: Critique of schoolInternet policies
I think the internet usage policies are ridiculous. The policies are almost impossible to find. I spent half an hour trying to find them and I'm a young, computer savvy person.
Students evaluated themselves by using the rubric below (see handout for rubric)
Students step out of roles and reflect on:• Use of arguments• Comfort in role• Targeted audiences/alliances
• Who has power?o Reasons: strategies
• Sense of potential change
. Students wrote a paper from their own point of view addressing a problem with Internet access
Discourses: Con student access
Students will access problematic/porn sites that will adversely influence them (“Strict father” cultural model” (Lakoff))
Students are not mature enough to select appropriate sites (Developmental discourse)
“Strict Father” cultural model: Charles Hammerstein III
The issue with sites like YouTube is that it is a helpful site when used correctly, but the ratio of students who would use it to the students who would abuse it would greatly favor the later of the two. R-rated sites are not ok because they usually contain information and content that may be considered offensive. The internet policies are very clear, if your grandmother would not appreciate it, then you probably shouldn't be doing those kind of things at school.
Student’s reflection
• I think it was a valuable learning experience because we actually got to argue back and forth with other people. If this had just been a writing assignment, it would have only been one-sided. You can use persuasive arguments in a paper but you can’t have a back and forth conversation on it. I really felt like it helped me get into someone else’s shoes and think like someone different from myself.
Topic: Identification of “unhealthy” food
Issue: Should “unhealthy” food be banned from grocery stores or schools
Pro: Yes: should be bannedObesity/diabeties a “national epidemic”
Foods can be identified as “unhealthy”
Con: No: should not be bannedDifficult to distinguish “healthy/unhealthy”
Negative economic consequences
Criteria for “unhealthy” food
> 35% from calories
> 10% calories from fat
> 25% calories from total sugar
High sodium >480 mg a serving
Low fiber <1.25 g a serving
Results
Over half (57%) of the study products were high sugar, and 53% were low in fiber.
Cereals were not only high in sugar (93%), but over half (60%) were low in fiber.
Over one-third (36%) of prepared foods and meals were high in sodium,
Nearly one-quarter (24%) were high in saturated fat, and nearly one-third (28%) were low in fiber.
http://unhealthyfoodroleplay.ning.com
Adopt a role consistent with that stance: farmer, parent, grocery store owner, nutritionist, food manufacturer, fast-food restaurant owner, scientist, teacher, student, etc.
Post a position with supporting reasons/evidence . Begin by identifying your role, for example, Fast-food restaurant owner.
Respond to other messages with counter-arguments