CCCC '97 Outcomes Forum: the Continuation - Pedagogy of the Oppressed Report
(continued), by Keith Rhodes
First, the text of the hand-out.
Outcomes, Objectives, and Goals in Writing Instruction:
Can the Banker's Tools Tear Down the Bank?
"Freire: As an educator, you can only maintain a non-directive posture
if you attempt a deceitful discourse; that is, a discourse from the perspective
of the dominant class. Only in this deceitful discourse can an educator
talk about a lack of direction. Why? I think this is because there is no
real education without a directive. To the extent that all educational
practice brings with it its own transcendence, it presupposes an objective
to be reached. Therefore practice cannot be nondirective. There is no educational
practice that does not point to an objective; this proves that the nature
of educational practice has direction."
Freire and Macedo, Literacy
background for this discussion:
A loose consortium of writing program administrators has begun an ongoing
dialogue on specifying outcomes for first-year college composition courses.
This consortium was born on WPA-L, the electronic discussion list for writing
program administrators, after Ed White made a deceptively simple point:
we ought to be able to describe what it is that we think our courses do
for students, however difficult it might be to quantify the results. Bill
Condon consolidated the following discussion into a workshop proposal for
the Conference on College Composition and Communication and recruited a
cast of discussion leaders drawn from the discussion. The conference organizers
transformed the proposed workshop into a forum session. At the session,
participants gathered into discussion groups (somewhat defined by different
interest areas and led by one or more discussion leaders) to generate and
collect tentative outcomes statements or particular perspectives on the
issue of outcomes statements. Plans are currently under way to continue
the efforts at the 1997 WPA summer conference and at next year's CCCC.
At this point, the initiative is not an official action of any established
organization.
The results of the CCCC forum have been presented in two electronic
media. First, a listserv discussion continues on a discussion list created
by Barry Maid for the original purpose of planning the forum. Since it
uses very simple software, the method for subscription to this list is
very unusual. Subscribers simply send an e-mail message to the list address
in which they put the word "subscribe" in the subject line and leave the
body of the message blank. The address is: outcomes@ethos.rhet.ualr.edu
Further, I have posted reports from the forum discussion groups and
related resources on a "text only" web site at this address:
http://www.nwmissouri.edu/~0500202/outcomes/main.html
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Next, the summary of main discussion points (identities excluded, since
so few gave the express permission I requested; Irv and Bill can give their
own accounts of themselves)
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Outcomes themselves are not inherently opposed to liberatory pedagogy -
though if we really had one we might not need them
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If we're going to be forced to teach to the test, we may as well write
the test.
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Even if we could write "liberatory" outcomes statements, certainly not
all
teachers use such a method.
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But we don't have to tell them they're doing it.
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Student populations should be included in this effort if there is any hope
of having them be truly liberatory.
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But many students want to be "banked" - they're into Strunk and
White (referring to a theme in Richard Batteiger's presentation), and think
that's what they need.
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If the outcomes were done well, that belief could become a basis for challenging
and exploring the ideology of those conventions.
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Maybe that should be an outcome: "Explore the ideology of these outcomes."
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Have students explore an outcomes statement, or even the evolving draft.
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We should not see the result of a national outcomes statement as necessary,
just the conversation.
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Then we should open the conversation to teachers working with students,
positioning this as a political discussion as well as an educational one.
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We have to come up with outcomes that actually can be assessed; How do
we know these outcomes have happened?
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Students should be able to know that they have happened, too.
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Maybe one outcome should be the ability to develop outcomes - to understand
how they work and what they signify.
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One thing about this project - it's either got to result in wide agreement
- on every syllabus in the country - or it's nothing.
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How will we deal with entrenched institutional politics about grading -
things like "Bell Curving"?
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We need to have more creative ways of assessing - of both grading and
not
grading.
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What specific things are going to have to be addressed? [much ribaldry
here concerning old behavioral objectives language]
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the ability to identify the determining characteristics of texts
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writing processes; the ability to see them and evaluate them, to evaluate
their sequences
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the ability to describe how processes might work differently for different
purposes, in different power relationships
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This would all work better if we could give a narrative explanation of
the outcome we see rather than a grade
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These outcome statements should probably be highly contextualizable - institutions
are different, and different writers mature and change and learn at different
rates and along different paths.
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How about "the ability to mature"?
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Or "the ability to understand what Greek [i.e., Strunk and White] really
means"?
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We have to be careful of the obsession with certainty that so many of our
audiences bring to their assessment of writing and writing instruction.
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How about "The ability to understand that writing is a life-long process"?
[At this point I summarized, to check for accuracy, the main outcomes suggestions]
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And now the written commentary given to me - edited oh so lightly, using
the identities provided
Dwarka Ramphal (co-panelist)
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There should be broad guidelines for outcome-based approaches - the journey
to get there is left to the teacher. I discuss with the students how to
reach the goal.
Ken [illegible - Flomerclay?]
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The process, the dialogue about the outcomes could only be healthy, be
it on the college level, secondary ed, or in the classroom
mcarroll@cwis.unomha.edu
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80% of the students should be able to determine when their composition
processes become appropriate products for the situation [a bit tongue in
cheek?].
Ruth Overman Fischer, George Mason University, rfischer@asf1.gmu.edu
[Heading on notes: "Liberatory outcome statements vs. mechanism for
assessment]
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Keep outcomes separate from mechanisms (portfolios, etc.) to find out if
outcome has been realized.
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Students should be able to deconstruct an assignment to assess implied
criteria
Bill Pedersen
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Again, another reminder that WPA, indeed all teachers' organizations and
individuals, must publicly articulate/describe what our goals are, what
"outcomes" we believe are necessary and why (in a "democratic" society).
*A priori*, we need to do a great deal of outreach and legwork to get students
and parents involved in how education is done (the process), so the public
can understand how teaching must work.
Walter Squire
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Yes, establishing national standards would de-mystify the bases for assessment,
but at the same time would further the notion hat there are objective criteria
for judging language usage.
Richard Batteiger (co-panelist)
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What would our outcomes statements look like?
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Examples [working with currently popular "student as client" ideas]:
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"Explore the ideology of outcomes"
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"Develop criteria for class grades along with the teacher"
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Negotiated, appropriate outcomes given the student's starting point in
the system.
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