1.1 (Fall 1979) 24
pp.
1.2 (Winter 1980) 32 pp.
1.3 (Spring 1980) 27 pp.
2.1 (Fall 1980) 48 pp.
2.2 (Winter 1981) 48 pp.
2.3 (Spring 1981) 19
pp.
3.1 (Fall 1981) 61 pp.
3.2 (Winter 1982) 59 pp.
4.1 (Fall 1982) 101 pp.
4.2 (Fall 1982) 121 pp.
|
In the introduction to Fforum: Essays on Theory
and Practice in the Teaching of Writing (Boynton-Cook, 1983), Patricia
L. Stock provides some background to the journal fforum. She
had been fforum's editor and had selected the essays in her Boynton-Cook
book from it. In June, 1979, at the end of a workshop for school and college
teachers sponsored by the English Composition Board of the University
of Michigan, "one of the workshop leaders, Bernie Van't Hul, suggested
that we continue our mutual discussion and instruction in a newsletter."
His suggestion bore rapid fruit under Stock's guidance and energy, and
the first issue of fforum: A Newsletter of the English Composition
Board, University of Michigan appeared in fall of 1979. The journal's
name refers to the classical Greek marketplace where open public discussion
took place as well as business transactions. The distinctive spelling
borrows from the medieval scribal practice of indicating a capital letter
by doubling the letter.
fforum lasted for little more than four years and only 10 issues.
The issues, however, were not of the size we think of when we imagine
a newsletter. Some were over 50 pages long, and last two over 100. The
final issue, too large to staple, was glued and makes a veritable book.
The contributions came from the most prominent compositionists of the
decade. The first two articles of the first issue were written by Ken
Macrorie and Peter Elbow. The last issue had pieces by Jay Robinson, William
E. Coles, Toby Fulwiler, Janice Lauer, Cy Knoblauch, Donald Murray, John
Warnock, and Stock herself. As she said in her introduction to the Boynton-Cook
selection, the journal was "nurtured by contributions from experts
who have written informatively and concisely, as well as with clarity
and grace. In just three years, their essays have attracted a readership
of more than two thousand teachers from every state of the nation."
The Boynton-Cook selection is just that, a selection. Many substantial fforum pieces can be found only in the newsletter. Others were
substantially changed from the newslettter originals. The newsletter also
bears its distinctive format, which includes editorials, letters to the
editor, bibliographies, teacher resources, advance synopses of conference
workshops and presentations, and some of the most pointed and entertaining
cartoons (by Van't Hul) that have ever graced a composition journal. Although
to the end the journal served some special purposes of the English Composition
Board at the University of Michigan, still these four volumes provide
an unmatched view of the USA composition scene in the early 1980s—charged
with theories of social and personal language construction and development,
informed by psychology and sociology, curious about the writing process,
enthused with research into writing, centered on the individual student,
and committed to writing across the curriculum and a school-university
articulation.
Thanks to Donald Ross and Patti Stock for generously lending the original
issues for scanning.
RH—May-July, 2006 |