Just to note, I used this assignment this semester, which I found on the FYW website and found it to work exceptionally well. I made minor tweaks.
English 1101 D371 Paper #1: Literacy Narrative
Due Dates
Proposal/Conceptual Outline: 2/10
First Draft: 2/19
Final Draft: 2/24
In this unit, we are investigating the place of language and writing in our lives. The goal here is to think through, in all of its nuance and contradictions, our varied experiences of language and writing – the ways in which the languages we speak contribute to a developing identity and sense of self/community, and the role writing (and reading) plays in this development. We want to think through personal experience, everyday life – the languages we use with friends, with relatives, immediate family, whomever else we may encounter in whatever context – and begin to consider how we use language differently in different contexts, often to a specific end. We want to begin to devise our own relationships to language. Through our readings, and as we consider our personal relationships to language and look critically at our own writing processes, we should begin to see how the world creeps in, how our everyday experiences of language, of writing, of being in school, are intimately connected to and reflective of the world at large and the institutions we inhabit.
Part I: Narrative (1000-1500 words)
To round out this unit, each of you will write an essay about a significant event in your experience as a writer/student. Consider what you’ve written in your observations: perhaps you want to expand on some of the things you have written there. Consider also the different ways the writers we’ve looked at write about their own experience as writers/speakers of language. You may want to write about:
- An event in your educational career that was particularly formative;
- A specific literacy/learning event that led you to become the thinker you are today;
- The first time you had a profound experience related to language;
- Your experience as a writer in this class so far, or in writing classes in general
You should talk about how the event shaped your relationship to reading and writing, or to school/education in general. Or else, you will want to talk about how your particular experience relates to some of the bigger social and cultural issues we discussed in class, such as race, the education system, standard English, etc. In any of these cases, you should reflect upon how your experience has enabled you to understand something specific about reading, writing, learning, or language AND how that understanding reflects on the communities/world you inhabit.
In this assignment you should seek to: describe your reading and writing processes, and the relationship between the two; gain a greater sense of how your personal experience of literacy, and how those experiences have shaped how you envision yourself as a writer in the current world; reflect on your own schooling and educational influences, and examine the social and technological issues involved in accessing language fluency; and explore understandings of the ethnic and cultural diversity of written English, as well as the influence of other registers, dialects, and languages.
This is not a 5-paragraph essay. This is you relating to your peers the story of whom you are as someone who belongs to a particular speech and/or writing community, and your history as a reader and writer. In that spirit, you can choose to format or write this in whatever way you think best communicates your story honestly.
You don’t have to choose a good event, or a happy one. You do not have to pretend. Write honestly, and with as much care as you can muster.
A note: this is not an excuse to write something unfocused or sloppy. You are allowed to be creative. You should absolutely be descriptive. Stay away from vague or general claims and clichés. It’s your life, you know it best and to the smallest detail – use that to your advantage.
Part 2: Reflection
After you have completed the first draft, you will bring in three copies of your essay – one for me and two for two of your peers. You will share these essays with your group, and, after reading each other’s essays, provide thoughtful, critical feedback. I will hand out a sheet with a list of questions to help guide you in your peer review. Note what you think works and what you think could use some work. You will attach a copy of the two letters and your first draft to your final draft.
Once you receive your grade, you will hand in a reflection (400 words). In this, you will explain:
- Why you chose to write the way you wrote
- What insights you’ve gained from the readings and your peers’ essays
- What you think worked and what you might improve on
Hi Alison,
I hope you are doing well, all things considered! Thank you for sharing your ENG 1101 Literacy Narrative unit. It’s exciting to hear that you’re using it to great effect this semester.
The overall prompt, priorities, and possibilities for the final draft seem clear to me, and they seem like they would be clear to students as well. In particular, I appreciate that you emphasize language not only in academic contexts but also beyond the classroom, in “everyday life – the languages we use with friends, with relatives, immediate family, whomever else we may encounter in whatever context.” Moreover, while you invite students to generate writing about personal events that address “bigger social and cultural issues we [will discuss] in class,” you emphasize that the overall goal of the narrative essay is to communicate how the event may help them “understand something specific about reading, writing, learning, or language.” In short: on the one hand, you invite students to reflect on language in the world around them, and on the other hand you challenge them to focus those reflections toward a specific purpose and potentially for a specific audience. These two aspects of the prompt make for both an engaging and focused assignment.
The prompt concisely informs students about the major steps in the unit: Proposal/Conceptual Outline, First Draft, Final Draft, Reflection. Perhaps you could experiment also with ways to briefly introduce students to the concept of low-stakes scaffolded assignments, so that students can more explicitly conceive of each upcoming class assignment/meeting as part of some bigger picture that leads toward the final draft. However, I understand that you may already do this when you introduce the course and unit in person.
Your prompt also offers guidance about each student’s freedom to move beyond the genre of the so-called 5-paragraph theme: “This is not a 5-paragraph essay. This is you relating to your peers the story of whom you are as someone who belongs to a particular speech and/or writing community, and your history as a reader and writer. In that spirit, you can choose to format or write this in whatever way you think best communicates your story honestly … A note: this is not an excuse to write something unfocused or sloppy. You are allowed to be creative. You should absolutely be descriptive. Stay away from vague or general claims and clichés.” However, to an English Composition student taking what may be their first writing-intensive course in their very first semester of their undergraduate studies, these freedoms may feel more concrete, clearly defined, or actionable only with a stronger sense of your grading criteria from the get-go. In our separate comment thread, you mentioned that you introduce your specific rubric during peer review, and I really like that approach. For the prompt early on, then, I might suggest just briefly summarizing the qualitative criteria that you will use to read the final draft, while reserving the detailed quantitative rubric for later in the essay unit as you suggested. Otherwise, the prompt should allude briefly to the upcoming concepts that students can use to make informed decisions about their drafts in progress—whether that’s purpose, audience, organization of ideas into groups of sentences, or whichever valuable rhetorical strategies you prioritize in the first few weeks of class that accompany the prompt’s metacognitive, content-based aims.
Thanks for your feedback in the separate comment thread, and thanks for the opportunity to reflect on the literacy narrative!
I hope this helps! Best wishes for a safe, healthy, and peaceful start to the week,
Josh