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Preliminary
note: The following is a draft of a working document, posted here in order
to become an object of discussion, re-thinking, and revision. We strongly
discourage any use or attribution of the following language that does not
take great care to represent it accurately.
CCCC'98 OUTCOMES STATEMENT FOR FIRST-YEAR COMPOSITIONIntroductionBy defining the common knowledge, skills, and attitudes sought by the wide variety of approaches to first-year composition currently used in American post-secondary education, we seek to describe a set of common outcomes for those first-year composition classes. Recognizing that different institutions aim at different levels of achievement for their students, we have not attempted to define "standards," or precise levels of ability. Standards should be left for specific institutions or specific groups of institutions that might wish to set common standards. To some extent, then, we do seek to regularize what can be expected to be taught in first-year composition, and to this end the document is not a mere compilation or summary of what currently takes place. Rather, the following outcomes are a careful integration of practice, research, and theory.Learning to write is a complex, individualized process which takes place over time with continued practice. Understanding this, it is important that teachers, administrators, and a concerned public do not imagine that these outcomes can be taught in reduced or simple ways. Rather, gaining these outcomes requires expert understanding of how students actually learn to write better. For this reason we expect the main audience for this document to be well-prepared college writing teachers and college writing program administrators. We have chosen to write in their professional language. Among such readers, terms such as "rhetorical," "genre," and "text" convey a rich and specific understanding. To aid other informed readers, the final version will include appendices with specific examples showing, in context, how these terms are used. These statements describe only what the drafters expect to find at the end of first-year composition, at most schools a required general education course or sequence of courses. As writers move beyond the first-year course, their writing abilities do not merely "increase." Rather, students' abilities both diversify along disciplinary and professional lines and move into whole new levels where expected outcomes statements would expand, multiply, and diverge. Still, each statement of outcomes is followed by suggestions for further work that builds on these outcomes. These suggestions indicate not only that some institutions may aim to go beyond these outcomes even for first-year writers but also that writing education needs to continue throughout students' college careers. The suggestions also demonstrate what further abilities can be developed upon this base. Rhetorical KnowledgeBy the end of first year composition, students should be able to
Critical Thinking, Reading, and WritingBy the end of first year composition, students should be able to
ProcessesBy the end of first year composition, students should
Knowledge of ConventionsBy the end of first year composition, students should
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maintained by comppile@gmail.com Pages originally compiled and maintained by Keith Rhodes Last updated February 14, 2010 |