Audience - Digital Writing Across the Curriculum

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Digital Writing Across the Curriculum l Implications of Technology for the Shape of a College Education

Engaging an audience and thereby engaging the student: Student authors are more likely to learn in their majors if they are actually teaching, and interacting with, an audience that is meaningful to them.

 

One way to engage an audience is through publishing on the Web, so that the public can see the work.  I remember hearing about a student at Southern Cal several years ago who was motivated to do a great job on a multimedia project about prison life. Her project included information (photos? video? I don't recall now) about a relative in prison, and she knew that, because the project was on the web, her relative and other inmates she'd studied would be able to see it.

 

(NEW!) Here's another example, from The TLT Group. We ran a workshop on how to develop 5 minute workshops for faculty: VERY short faculty development or training experiences that can provide important education for instructors. A first step for participants in the workshop was to produce a short online introduction for themselves that would, among other things, provide personal answers to several fundamental questions posed by the workshop leader, Steve Gilbert.  If you were in an online professional development workshop and were asked to introduce myself,  how would you do it? I might copy a short bio into an e-mail. These participants were asked to create short online clips using visuals and audio. Here's what Rich James of Columbus State Community College did, a YouTube clip.  Look at the use of media and consider also that, being on YouTube, it's available to a very wide audience.  This clip illustrates both the motivating power of audience, the skills we could be developing in our students, and the range of academic and personal uses to which such skills could be put.

 

Authors on the Web can enable readers to interact with the writing, by choosing paths and by using services available in the project (e.g., searching a database; reading source materials linked to the project, engaging in a simulation created by the author) or by soliciting their input to future versions of the essay, as this web site does. Perhaps most important, it's easier to make web-based writing available to readers outside the classroom and outside the academy.

  • A 'service learning' example: Ruth Kastenmayer is teaching a service learning course at Judson College in Summer 2006 in which students will create web sites for community agencies. The course description reads, in part, "Overall emphasis is centered on those factors which make writing for the Web different from writing print documents, e.g., the ability to chunk and layer information and to employ a more concise, direct writing style...The service-learning component of this course provides and maintains effective Web sites for non-profit organizations in the area of Perry County, Alabama." 

Another meaningful audience is other students.  IN these projects, students were asked to do digital writing assignments that would be used by other students. 

  • We hear about more and more classes in which students are asked to work together to create wiki textbooks that they can then use in studying or reviewing for the course. Click here to see some examples.

  • This web site from students in a history course at Vassar is another example of students creating study resources for other students to use: they've organized cartoons and commentary about the Presidential Election of 1896.

  • In this blog entry, John McClymer of Assumption University (MA) talks about how his students will be studying web sites created earlier by several classes of American Studies students at the University of Virginia. (Thanks also to John for pointing out the Vassar/1896 web site.)

The web offers more options than linear text does for engaging an audience. The author can use images and the power of the human voice.

Finally, students can collaborate in the writing of traditional books (and a variety of aspects of word processing make that easier).  Here's an example of a popular history book co-authored by a Virginia Tech professor, Peter Wallenstein, and a team of undergraduates.

 

Please send me your comments about this page, and new examples and ideas to add. I'll be happy to acknowledge your help!

Steve Ehrmann (ehrmann @ tltgroup.org)

Digital Writing Across the Curriculum l Implications of Technology for the Shape of a College Education

 

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