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Designing Writing Assignments
Low-stakes assignments comprise a significant aspect of writing
in the disciplines. Faculty and students alike may be unfamiliar
with the value of writing that is characterisatically ungraded
and exploratory. The purpose of such assignments, however, is
neither to test your students' knowledge, nor to measure their
writing skill. Instead, these assignments are meant to develop
students' understanding and their ability to communicate it. <more>
High-stakes assignments are those for which professors expect
polished academic writing that demonstrates knowledge of the course's
subject matter. High stakes assignments are often the final stage
of a writing process that includes low-stakes assignments, peer
critique, and multiple revisions. High stakes assignments should
always be accompanied by detailed, printed instructions. It may
also be helpful to show students examples of the kind of work
you would like to see from them. <more>
Staging (sometimes called scaffolding) is one of the most important,
and most useful, WID practices. Staging assignments simply means
that low stakes assignments are used to build up to high stakes
assignments. Staging breaks up assignments into smaller, more
manageable cognitive tasks; allows for more intervention when
its most useful to the student; and directly links in and
out-of-class work and knowledge with high stakes assignments,
so students clearly see the relationship between the assignments,
the subject matter, and the purpose of the course. This may sound
difficult and time-consuming, but the outcome is well worth the
effort. Remember, many low-stakes assignments require minimal
grading time. <more>
Documentation of Assignments
Make sure students know at the start that documentation counts.
Because the rules for documentation of sources are complex, it
is a good idea to give students a broad overview of why it is
so important to make clear the sources of their information. The
Writing
Center and the library have ample resources for teaching MLA
and APA styles of documentation. Particularly in the age of web-surfing,
plagiarism is a major concern with research papers. If an assignment
has elicited plagiarized papers in the past, you might revise
the assignment to make it more specific to your course. Doing
so will make it harder for students to find a comparable essay
online. Staging the assignment can also help.
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For more information about the WID program at LaGuardia, contact:
Marian Arkin, 718-482-5680, mcarkin@aol.com, English Department, LaGuardia Community College (CUNY)
31-10 Thomson Avenue, Long Island City, NY 11235 |
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