Transcript Slide 1

Building Supportive Cultures for Student Writing
in UK Higher Education
Lisa Clughen
Christine Hardy
Nottingham Trent University
Overview
• Student experiences of literacies prior to
university (focusing on the UK)
• Student experiences of academic
literacies during the transition to
university (focusing on the first year)
• Including and supporting students with
their academic literacies whilst in
transition to university
• 30% discount
• Please go to
http://books.emeraldinsight.com/offer/
and enter code: 2012WITD
Research Context
Students are offered a lot of
support, so why are they
still struggling?
How do our students experience
writing?
I've promised myself that I'm not going to hit the
panic button when things go wrong this year so
I'd really appreciate some level-headed advice to
keep me on track.
I was up till the early hours trying to do this (…)
essay and got myself in a right mess (i lost the
ability to write so cried for a while) and have
overslept.
I am having quite a lot of problems at the minute now
that I am in my final year and am suffering from a
complete lack of academic confidence.
This is also a bit of an
SOS
message.
Research Frame: Socio-cultural
approaches
‘The most pertinent insights into literacy learning
come from acknowledging its sociocultural framing’
(Christie and Misson, 2002, 54)
Two key insights from Sociocultural
Perspectives
•Writing is cultural/contextual: it
varies over time and place
•Writing is linked to the Self/
Subjectivity-Agency/ Identity/
Being
Data Collection
Collected data from both students and academic staff
using questionnaires and focus groups:
Students
• 724 completed questionnaires from the annual experience
and expectations survey from pre-arrival students from
2009-2011
• 28 students across all level of study in Art & Design and
Arts & Humanities (9 focus groups)
• 455 completed questionnaires from all students at NTU
2011
Academic Staff
• 136 completed questionnaires from academic staff at NTU
2011
Research Areas
•Experiences of reading and writing prior to
attending university
•Expectations of reading and writing at university
(students and academic staff)
•Practices of reading and writing at university
•Feelings about reading and writing
•Support for reading and writing (students and
academic staff)
•Open section
Writing at School
Image from Ofstead News Issue 9. Available from:
http://ofstednews.ofsted.gov.uk/?cmd=audiences.printable&issue=28&audience=scho
ols
National Curriculum: Key Stage 4 - GCSE
Grade C (level 5 descriptor):
Pupils’ writing is varied and interesting, conveying meaning
clearly in a range of forms for different readers, using a
more formal style where appropriate. Vocabulary choices
are imaginative and words are used precisely. Sentences,
including complex ones, and paragraphs are coherent, clear
and well developed. Words with complex regular patterns
are usually spelt correctly. A range of punctuation, including
commas, apostrophes and inverted commas, is usually used
accurately. Handwriting is joined, clear and fluent and,
where appropriate, is adapted to a range of tasks.
Student experiences
• Directed reading, not much additional reading
• Information given by tutors in terms of subject and
content
• Used internet a lot for research
• Only parts of book read
• More writing than reading, but short pieces (5 or fewer
pages)
• Schooled for examinations: limited assessment types
• Teacher support to develop writing, particularly
assessing two or more drafts
Dependency
… you would write something and then … I
remember for my coursework in History, I
would hand it in, he would mark it and tell
me what I needed to improve on, and I
would get it back and I could do some more
and then hand it in. So I think that was – it
was ‘spoonfed’ to you I guess, you got a lot
of support. It was the same for English
(final year A&H).
Outcomes
• Prior to attending university students feel prepared to write clearly
and effectively, think critically and analytically, analyse problems
and analyse written materials.
“To begin with [I was] not worried about it. I felt from school
and college I knew enough about what to do” (second year
A&D).
• They expected to receive support in their studies and were
confident that they could access this easily. They felt that support
to help them to succeed was very important, and they expected to
receive prompt feedback on their work.
• Epistemological beliefs about learning: reproductive conceptions,
not prepared to work with and contest the authoritative knowledges
presented in texts, do not reflect on their beliefs in order to form
judgements and demonstrate them through appropriate academic
discourse.
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Writing at university
The Student Life 2012. Image available from: http://studentslife101.com/2012/06/28/theuniversity-gadget-guide-dictaphones/
14
Student Expectations of Writing at Uni
All students had expected literacy (reading and writing) at university
to be harder than their previous experiences, either at school or
college but were unclear about what this meant:
Harder than it was before, as university is the next step and it
seems like a bigger thing … [harder] in a more professional
way maybe, more challenging as it would be the next step in
your education (first year A&D).
I imagined it to be extremely difficult, as my whole perception
of university was like the crème de la crème. … I just
thought it would be extremely hard (first year A&H)
Student expectations about writing at
university
Other students had been influenced by what they read before
attending university:
My expectations were really high when I came to university,
how I was expected to write. I almost felt intimidated by
what I was reading, which is what I thought I had to write so
it was really ‘scary’ as you read something and think about
how well they have written it and the quality of what you are
saying (final year A&H).
I thought things had to be elaborate and sound as if I
knew what I was talking about and the words and the
vocabulary had to be more complicated (second year
A&H).
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Staff expectations of Writing at Uni
…first year students to reference appropriately
(58%), to structure a coherent argument (76%)
and to follow the conventions of their discipline for
presenting written work (87%). When it came to
synthesis and criticality, they expected students to
undertake synthesis of others’ work, but the
expectations of critical appraisal at this stage were
less onerous.
Student experiences of writing at university
• Many students find that their successful strategies for A level
are now inappropriate (Lea and Street 1998), so they can
increasingly lose confidence once at university (Ahmad and
McMahon 2006) as “[they] suddenly see their undergraduate
essays marked more harshly than their school essays”
(Murray and Kirton 2006, p.9).
• They find difficulty with: referencing (the primary issue),
academic jargon and difficulties in structuring academic work,
finding academic reading boring and finding it hard to read
academic texts.
• One of the difficulties is due to the different types of text
they are expected to read at university, their lack of previous
knowledge of these text genres and their lack of familiarity
with content
Student experiences of writing at university
• Less writing but the quality is different
I don’t find the actual pace or the amount of writing and
assignments I have to hand in is as intense as it was at
college, but the quality of writing – trying to learn to write in
an academic way … we knew that we needed to be more
concise – we would have less words to get all our information
in, but it is changing the tone of your voice, from your voice
to what is acceptable in an essay, that is what I find really
difficult and that is not what I was expecting so much (first
year A&H).
• Referencing is also a problem:
One part of this ‘academic way’ is referencing and the
possibility of plagiarism. “You never had to do that at sixth
form, you literally wrote ‘by so and so’ and you did not have
to do anything else” (second year A&H)
Student experiences of writing at university
• Disciplinary differences:
[You] take information from many sources; different
terminology, different ways of people writing about it.
So to put it all together in one coherent piece of
writing is difficult
(first year A&D).
Referencing is completely different for English and
History – I
did not understand how it worked. ….
Before I came to university, I never had to do the
whole referencing thing, and that was a big shock
(first year A&H)
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Student experiences of writing at university
• Writing in different genres:
• Students are “expected to possess or to acquire a working
knowledge of a variety of written forms and writing
conventions” (Ganobcsik-Williams 2004).
• Staff at NTU identified 47 different genres, students 19.
“[I had] no experience of the different kinds of writing
required … so it took me a while to grasp what they
wanted me to do (first year A&D).
… but, what is a document response? We did not get it
defined in seminars or lectures” (A&H year two).
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Differing expectations
‘Every time a student sits down to write for us he or
she has to invent the university for the occasion –
invent the university, that is, or a branch of it … The
student has to learn to speak our language, to
speak as we do, to try on the particular ways of
knowing, selecting, evaluating, reporting,
concluding, and arguing that define the discourse of
our community. Or perhaps I should say the
various discourses of our community’. (Bartholomae
1985: 134).
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What do the students want
• Useful feedback
I read everything, not just the comments but what has been
circled, question marks etc. and sometimes I don’t
understand why they are there, what I have done wrong”
(A&H year two).
One of the comments I get is ‘you need to write in a scholarly
way’ but what is a scholarly way? I don’t understand it –
what they want I am not capable of giving (A&H year one).
• Timetabled one to one tutorials with staff
“[you can] speak to your tutor directly and get out of that
session exactly what you needed to get” (A&D year one)
• Often felt awkward asking staff for help
“it would take me a long time to get the courage to go, it is a
pride thing really” (A&H year two)
What do students want?
Compulsory essay writing in the course
(in a seminar setting)
‘to really apply it to what you are
doing on your specific course, the
specific essay etc. It gives you
ideas on how to develop your
points’. (A&H year one)
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What help students want in order of
importance
• Compulsory sessions in their programme of study, in a seminar or
tutorial setting but not a lecture, as those were for the delivery of
content
• Tutor feedback on their work
• More detail about tutor requirements for a piece of work
• University workshops
• Drop-in sessions with someone separate from their programme of
study
• On-line or printed support materials
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Concluding Thoughts (1)...
Academic writing support is the
responsibility of the university as a
whole and should be central to a
university’s learning and teaching
strategy.
Concluding Thoughts (2)...
Recognise that literacy is a social
practice:
–broader contexts
–individual contexts
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Concluding thoughts (3)
‘We are about to see an escalation in student
expectation ramped up to a magnitude that is
almost impossible to imagine or comprehend, a
magnitude far beyond that which might already
have created challenges for us to resolve’.
(Beer, 2011)
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Concluding thoughts (4)...
Writing support tailored to the individual.
There is no one size fits all: writing environments
need to be organic to cater for the different needs
of these very different beings.
Dialogic writing environments.
‘Writing in the
Disciplines’ book
Editors:
Lisa Clughen, Nottingham Trent
University, UK
Christine Hardy, Nottingham Trent
University, UK
Publication date: May 2012
30% discount
Please go to
http://books.emeraldinsight.co
m/offer/ and enter code:
2012WITD
• More information:
http://www.emeraldinsight.com/products/books/notable/page.htm?i
d=9781780525464
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