Saturday, September 15, 2012

One thing that we have mentioned in class and that had come up in our GA meetings with Clyde is how great it is that as Writing Center consultants, we really get to learn a great deal while helping others. This was very evident in my consultations this week, as in most of my appointments, I got to work with non-native speakers. In one, I worked with an assistant professor from the Math Department on a research paper that he (and I assume some of his colleagues) had been working on. It was incredible to me to have this absolutely brilliant Asian man to work with who not only was able to understand, interpret, and work with numbers at an incredibly high level, but who could also communicate those ideas in textual form, and in a totally different language from the one he grew up speaking. I had huge respect for this man, and yet, I was really grateful for the fact that I think I did actually help him. There were a few instances where the subject/verb agreement was an issue, and there were a few other minor grammatical mistakes that, in reading through the piece together, we were able to catch. Also, I think this comes from the FYW program's approach to teaching composition, but as we read through his work, I felt extra-sensitive to the genre conventions that he was working under, which though I am not familiar with research papers in Math, I mentioned he might need to check on. I mentioned this in reference to how he was noting the number of the figures he used inline, and I was grateful that he agreed to check in other texts produced for the same purpose to determine how best to indicate those details.

Overall, I just felt like the whole session was a fantastic opportunity to work towards the "justice and fairness" that we have been discussing all week. Though this was on a very small scale, I just really appreciated that in this consultation I was able to genuinely appreciate this man and his work, and to learn about something that I never would otherwise have been exposed to, just by working in the writing center. So, we may not have been working on pronouns, but this epiphany came about from really sitting down and actually working on other "little things". So I just want to end by saying, that yes, we may deal in details at times, but overall, somethimes it is the little stuff that matters, and in some cases, it does add up to help us work on much larger issues, like those of justice and fairness.

1 comment:

  1. Hi, Annie!

    I loved hearing about your session with the
    math prof—we’ve been getting more and more faculty to come in, and I think that says a tremendous amount about the service we (you!) provide. And think for a moment about how high the stakes are for this man on that particular project…

    The stakes are super high! In cases like this, dealing with the details is CRITICAL. And details, as you note, do point towards much larger issues (and seriously, are there many issues larger than justice and fairness?).

    I’ve so enjoyed reading the journals for everyone in the class this week because they’re all really focusing on these larger issues, which did not even occur to them at all before we started the class. They’re so engaged and invested already, and that’s amazing.
    Next week we’ll start discussing revision, and I think you’ll find our conversations about revision to be incredibly valuable as you prepare to teach the portfolio work at the end of the semester. It will help you get your students to buy in to why revision is important. You’ll definitely hear other TAs struggle with this—many of their students will be less than enthused about it. Your students will rock it!

    I hope you’re having a great weekend!

    Melissa

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