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Department of English, Foreign Languages and Speech Communications
College of Liberal Arts


 

A major in English or a modern foreign language is the “Swiss army knife” of majors. Excellent communication skills are but one bonus that comes from studying language and literature.

Assessing Writing-To-Learn Activities

Writing to learn activities are meant to encourage students to explore new concepts and to deepen understanding of those concepts. In essence, students use informal language to explain new ideas to themselves.

Thus, assessing writing-to-learn activities requires the instructor to take on the role of mentor rather than expert. Students who write journals, notes, rough drafts, minute-papers, and exit slips need to focus on clear expression—not on grammar and punctuation.

Nonetheless, regular writing-to-learn activities can improve overall writing proficiency. When the emphasis is on clarity, student writing-to-learn assignments can be structured to emphasize organization, topic sentences, or providing cogent examples of a concept.

 

The Colorado State University WAC offers a number of useful suggestions for responding to WTL activities without spending endless hours grading.

Here are some of the tips from their site:

Because most teachers cannot read through and comment on every WTL activity students complete, we suggest the following alternatives:

  • Use an occasional WTL warm-up at the beginning of class as a “quiz.” Pick up a single sheet of paper or glance at a computer screen and comment briefly on students’ grasp of a reading assignment or key concepts.
  • Pick up WTL material from five-ten students every day or every other day. Don’t read every word, but skim quickly to identify tasks students might need help with–a reading that bogged down in class discussion, a page that has very little written, a page that has lots written.
  • Use different colored pens or highlighters to note points in selected entries. One color means “good idea,” one means “consider pursuing this idea as a paper topic,” another means “come back to this idea again and explore it in more detail,” and so on.
  • While students are writing at the beginning and end of class, walk around the room and read over shoulders. This technique is especially easy if you have students writing on computers. Stop to talk to or jot a note on the writing of 3-4 students. If students don’t like having you read over shoulders, ask them to select a few recent WTL activities and put those to one side for you to collect and read quickly.
  • Ask students to select their best or most provocative WTL writing for you to review.
  • Ask students to share WTL activities with one or two classmates.
  • Ask students to send the WTL writing that contains questions about course material to you over e-mail.
  • Ask students to post provocative questions or summary/analysis of readings on an electronic bulletin board or Web forum for class comment.

Back to Writing Toolkit page

 

ABOUT THE PROGRAM

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More about us
The department of English, Foreign Languages, & Speech Communication at Jackson State
University is a unified, multidisciplinary marketplace of ideas committed to creating a more
equitable global society that supports diverse cultural experiences, fosters professionalism, and
honest academic integrity and responsibility. It is our goal to foster independent, innovative, and
ethical leaders who take initiative to make decisions and solve problems in their communities.

LEARN BY DOING

The area of English at Jackson State University has established the following major objectives:
• To help students develop the ability to read, think, and write clearly and critically.
• To help students understand and appreciate good writing and literature.
• To help students become aware of the truth, beauty, and wisdom of our culture to the
extent that they are able to make value judgments about the society in which they live.
• To prepare students for teaching English and for other careers that require critical
thinking, cultural awareness, and clear writing.
• To provide the necessary courses for all students to fulfill state and university
requirements.
• To encourage students to engage in creative and scholarly writing.

“Challenging Minds, Changing Lives.”

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APPLY YOUR KNOWLEDGE

• Students will be able to draw on relevant cultural and historical information to analyze
and interpret a literary text.
• Students will be able to demonstrate familiarity with literary traditions pre- and post1800, including identifying authors, genres, literary movements, and styles.
• Students will be able to analyze underrepresented experiences and cultural diversity,
including issues of race, gender, class, sexuality, and ethnicity through the study of
ethnic minority or non-Western texts.
• Students will be able to research and write focused, convincing analytical essays in clear,
grammatical prose.
• Students will be able to read, write, and speak effectively in at least one foreign
language.

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

English, Foreign Languages, and Speech majors have a plethora of career options:

Social Media Manager

Technical Writer Teacher or Private tutor Interpreter
Translator Speech Language Pathologist SLP- PR Speech Language Pathologist Assistant Registered Behavior Technician (RBT)

RESOURCES

 

Undergraduate

Graduate

Useful links

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READY TO JOIN?

For more information, please contact us at (601) 979- 2249.  We look forward to meeting with you and seeing how our program can help you achieve your goals.

Dr. Ebony Lumumba, Chair

DEPARTMENT OF English, Foreign Languages and Speech Communications

Location

Fourth Floor, Dollye M.E. Robinson Liberal Arts Building

Contact

(601) 979-2249 Phone
(601) 979-5105 Fax

Email

ebony.o.lumumba@jsums.edu

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