READING BY ELIZABETH WARDLE
YOU CAN LEARN TO WRITE IN GENERAL
Elizabeth Wardle
There is no such thing as writing in general. Do you doubt
this claim? Test it out. Go to your desk right now and attempt
to write something in general.Do not write for any specific audience, purpose, or context. Do not use any conventions that you’ve
learned for school, work, creative writing, and so on. Just write in
general.
You can’t do it, because it can’t be done. There is no such thing as writing in general. Writing is always in particular.
It’s not just common sense that tells us that learning to write in general is not possible. Many studies of writing have been done— in workplaces, in classes across the college landscape, and in social and civic settings. They tell us that every new situation, audience, and purpose requires writers to learn to do and understand new possibilities and constraints for their writing. Writing fan fiction in Wattpad requires understanding what other fans expect, what fan fiction writers and readers think good fan fiction is, and what the technological medium supports and allows. The same is true for any other kind of writing—we write in our journals and think of our future selves or anyone who might find the journal. We write as biologists for other specialists who understand previous findings and value the ideas of some biologists more than others. As students write across their general education courses, they find themselves repeatedly asked to write essays or research papers, but often learn the hard way that their history teacher, poetry teacher, and philosophy teacher all mean and expect very different things by “essay” or “research paper.” This is because context, audience, purpose, medium, history, and values of the community all impact what writing is and needs to be in each situation.
You can’t do it, because it can’t be done. There is no such thing as writing in general. Writing is always in particular.
It’s not just common sense that tells us that learning to write in general is not possible. Many studies of writing have been done— in workplaces, in classes across the college landscape, and in social and civic settings. They tell us that every new situation, audience, and purpose requires writers to learn to do and understand new possibilities and constraints for their writing. Writing fan fiction in Wattpad requires understanding what other fans expect, what fan fiction writers and readers think good fan fiction is, and what the technological medium supports and allows. The same is true for any other kind of writing—we write in our journals and think of our future selves or anyone who might find the journal. We write as biologists for other specialists who understand previous findings and value the ideas of some biologists more than others. As students write across their general education courses, they find themselves repeatedly asked to write essays or research papers, but often learn the hard way that their history teacher, poetry teacher, and philosophy teacher all mean and expect very different things by “essay” or “research paper.” This is because context, audience, purpose, medium, history, and values of the community all impact what writing is and needs to be in each situation.
There is no writing in general, and thus no single class or workshop or experience can teach people to write. once and for all. But
people want to believe that it’s possible to write in general because
this belief makes writing seem less difficult and allows them to
believe that writers can get a one-time writing inoculation that
will extend across all settings. If this is the case, then non-English
teachers and employers are off the hook; they don’t have to help
students learn to write in their classrooms or workplaces, they can
just criticize writers for not being able to meet their expectations—
and criticize English teachers for not doing their jobs.
The idea that we can all learn to “write in general” is not just
a harmless myth. It’s a dangerous idea that needs to die because it
hurts students and frustrates teachers and employers. And writers
who believe it are easily discouraged because they don’t know how
to learn what they need to learn in new writing situations.
A better conception of writing is one in which we all remember (realistically) our own experiences learning to write in different situations, and then apply that memory to our expectations
of what we and others are capable of achieving. A better notion
of how writing works is one that recognizes that after learning
scribal skills (letters, basic grammatical constructions), everything
a writer does is impacted by the situation in which she is writing.
And thus she is going to have to learn again in each new situation. Yes, she can apply and repurpose some of what she already
knows how to do, but she will have to learn new things and not
expect that what she already knows about writing is easily applicable in new situations. This means that when an employer hires
a student fresh out of college and asks her to write a report for the
CEO, he might expect that she knows what a report is in general,
but he needs to remember that she’s never seen a report at this
company (she needs some examples), does not know the CEO and
his idiosyncrasies (she needs some insider info), and does not yet
understand what people in this setting consider important (she
needs a heads-up on that). Similarly, parents should expect that
their child might struggle when writing in a new class, or when
moving from high school to college because learning takes time
and requires being immersed in the context. Journalists and critics need to remember that texting employs certain conventions
that are appropriate for their medium and purpose—and those are
not destroying writing in general, because there is no writing in
general. All of us, then, should give ourselves time to anticipate
new writing situations, look at examples, find out what people’s
32 Bad Ideas
values and expectations are in them, and give ourselves time to
practice and learn what we need to know in order to write successfully in that new situation.
If we can remember that there is no writing in general and
no magic formula that will help us write well in all situations, we
are more likely to be able to use (or transfer or repurpose) what
we know effectively from prior writing situations. This is because
we will be aware of the new context, on the lookout for examples, and willing to accept that struggle and practice are simply a
part of learning to write in a new situation. Too frequently, writers attempt to rigidly use what has worked for them in other situations, only to find out the hard way that such rigid re-use is not
appropriate in the new setting. These ideas—that there is no writing in general, that writers always have more to learn, that failing
or struggling are a normal part of writing—are some of the many
threshold concepts of the discipline of writing studies. In other
words, they are things researchers have learned, and things that
will help writers be more effective, if only they can accept them in
place of the common cultural assumptions about writing that are
not always accurate.
There is no writing inoculation, because there is no such thing
as writing in general. But this isn’t bad news. Rather, it gives all
writers permission to keep learning, to fail, and to engage in new
kinds of writing in new situations.
Further Reading
For more about transfer of learning, see David Perkins and
Gavriel Salomon’s entry on transfer of learning in the International
Encyclopedia of Education, Second Edition. For more about transfer specifically for writing, see Aviva Freedman and Christine
Adam’s “Learning to Write Professionally: ‘Situated Learning’ and
the Transition from University to Professional Discourse,” Anne
Beaufort’s Writing in the Real World: Making the Transition from School
to Work, Patrick Dias et al.’s Worlds Apart: Acting and Writing in
Academic and Workplace Contexts, Elon University’s “Elon Statement
on Writing Transfer,” and a special-issue in the journal Composition
Forum on transfer of writing-related knowledge and skills.
Keywords
dispositions, genre conventions, genre, literacy, transfer
Comments
Post a Comment