I find it very interesting that at the time this article was
written, just on the cusp of the commercial internet/computer takeover of the
20th century in 2004, Yancey was already preparing the world and the
writing discipline to face the challenges of a world where print and digital had
to exist side by side. She states, that "according to these (early) assessments...writing
IS "words on paper," composed on a page with a pen or pencil by
students who write words on paper, yes-- BUT who ALSO compose words and images
and create audio files on Web logs, in word processors, with video editors and
Web editors and in e-mail and on presentations software and in instant
messaging and on listservs and on bulletin boards--and no doubt in whatever
genre will emerge in the next ten minutes" (298).
The genres that have emerged in the next 10 minutes, such as Facebook, twitter, YouTube, etc. have all followed in this same pattern. They
have all come with their own sets of rules and functionalities that, while
different from the written word, still actively seek to expand the accepted
definition of writing and what is considered academic writing. The interesting note
that Yancey points out is that "most faculty and students alike have
learned these genres on our own, outside of school" (302). No one had to
teach you how to use facebook or
twitter. It gained popularity and, in order to keep up with the digital and
social landscape, you taught yourself "largely without instruction and,
more to the point here, largely without OUR (academic) instruction" (301).
So what does this say about the academic writing discourse?
If students are already teaching themselves the essentials of digital
communication, what is left for the classroom to teach them other than outdated
English practices that will one day be considered “ancient”? Yancey recognizes
this problem as well, saying that "the screen is the language of the vernacular,
that if we do not include it in the school curriculum, we will become as
irrelevant as faculty professing in Latin" (305).
Already, departments calling themselves English have
diminished, and in their place departments calling themselves Communication and
Division of Humanities has risen to take their places. Writing and communicating
are so much more than English, the pedagogy of the internet allows for visual
elements, spoken, audio, and more. Many of them, like visuals, don’t correspond
to a particular language either. Yancey argues that "education needs to
get in step with life practices and should endeavor to assist students to
negotiate through life" (305) rather than just turn in assignment to a
single teacher and receive a single grade. If we believe writing to be social,
shouldn't academic writing then be able to exist outside of the feedback loop
of just the teacher to the student to the teacher? (310)
"We ALREADY inhabit a model of communication practices
incorporating multiple genres related to each other, those multiple genres
remediated across contexts of time and space, linked one to the next,
circulating across and around rhetorical situations both inside and outside
school," (308) says Yancey. In our daily lives we interact with dozens of
different media, remediated from form to form, and all interconnected. What is
stopping us in the classroom from doing the same? Moving forward, academia’s
best bet is to develop classes around the idea of circulating material between
mediums and establishing that there is a flow and a direct connectedness
between them all. This type of interconnected awareness not only allows the
student to become better-rounded by acknowledging the value of different genres
and their media representations, but also allows the student to truly show off
their self-learned skills in social platforms such as Facebook and YouTube,
tools that are already helping them navigate their lives. Why not allow the
students to navigate their own education as well?
Yancey feels the largest barrier to this integration of new
composition with old composition is the academic system itself. "It is
past time that we fill the glaringly empty spot between first-year composition
and graduate education with a composition major" (308). I strongly agree
with her on the point. My undergraduate education would have felt far more
useful had I learned even just a few of the things I have learned in my
graduate course on Computers and Composition. Instead of learning outdated
study (and people) skills as I did in my Freshmen orientation course, it would
have benefited me far more to learn about remediation and how printed text is
just one of hundreds of ways to present a material and that some materials are just
more effective in certain platforms and less in others.
On a different note, I wanted to point out something Yancey
said in her article that had to do with a discussion I had with Chris and Tom
about my Rhetorical Analysis. Yancey says "the writer invented through
such a text is a function of that arrangement. In other words, you can only
invent inside what an arrangement permits--and different media permit different
arrangements" (317). If this is considered part of the pedagogy of
composition, how does one truly create a new theory of writing within an
established technology when the coding of the technology allows for certain
things and doesn't allow for others?
For me, your question hinges around of "truly creat[ing] a new theory of writing." That seems too broad to me. More simply, the writer invented through a networked text is different from the writer invented through a non-networked text. It's not really a new theory of writing, or if it is, you'd have to spend a lot of time explaining what the "new theory" encompasses.
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