Monday, November 12, 2012

Lo final...tarde, como siempre...

I swore I was going to do this one on time, but again, no. I really, really apologize for not being able to get with the program on this, Melissa. But anyway.

I actually had some consultations with native speakers last week! It was pretty exciting. One gal wa applying to nursing school and wanted help with her personal statement. It was not necessarilly like applying to a graduate degree program in English, but it struck me as being similar to my boyfriend, Andy, and his application to medical school. Because I had worked with him on his last summer and had helped another gal with her application to veterinary school, I felt like I had some background in the weird genre presented. I think this situation loosely falls into the discussion over experts vs generalists, though, in that in this consultation as in the veterinary one, I don't think it necessarily helps me to help the writer for having seen other papers like this. In every case, I have felt that the writer needed more specific, concrete, and personal details to add to their narrative, which I think most consultants would have wanted as well, just as readers. But I wonder if that is what the committee members look for, or if they prefer a more impersonal style of writing because of the scientific nature of the work. At any rate, I think that this gal, as well as the veterinary student past, were able to integrate some meaningful, personal details into their text that allowed it to speak to who they are and what they care about and why more so than any c.v. of their would. As writers, I like to think that they place more value on specifics, and on their own experiences. But whether any of these musings are correct or not, I do have to say that it is so interesting to see the very, very different ways that people write, in terms of their formatting, structure, and the language that they use, particularly when they come from other disciplines.

I found the discussions about non-directive and directive tutoring styles to be reallly interesting this week, as well, and I'm glad that what I get from the rest of the 303-ers is not that they are die-hards in either extreme, but approach each as a possible means of helping a particular writer in a paricular situation. I think that the group that I was working with seemed to lean towards being non-directive in situations where the writer had more knowledge of the task and subject, and to being more directive in those situations where the writer was clueless about one thing or another. I think this is a natural way to approach situations, in that you aren't going to tell a quite knowledgeable person what to do and how to do it, yet you might inform a person who is lost of how to get back on the path, which may include sharing of specialized information that they don't have. Yet my group didn't come up with an end-all, be-all procedure for how to approach these very different kinds of writers, probably because they have already picked up that each writer is unique and individual, and that they as consultants must assess those writers where they are and adapt accordingly. I'm just really glad that the Shamoon piece, even if we didn't like the tone and style of it, set forth that in some instances it is more than appropriate to be directive in a consultation. I think they know, too, that one doesn't have to be consistent with that strategy throughout the session, though; they can shapeshift as needed, which I think is where we want them to be. I think it is essential to have the mindset that it is okay to try new techniques and strategies and to not be worried about "breaking the rules" set forth, because in that environment, our consultants wouldn't be able to flow with the situations that evolve in front of them, and they would be less effective at giving our writers what they need, when they need it.

1 comment:

  1. I've also been really pleased by how this particular group of 303ers has gathered these theories as strategies, as opposed to rules that must be followed at all times. Regardless of how we've approached this in the past, some folks really like a list of "always do" and "never do" things. This group seems to have embraced the flexibility that is needed to do this work. Phew!

    You're absolutely right about the application essays--they are a chance to demonstrate how the individual is unique, and they are about being able to articulate how their past experiences will impact their ability to function in the program. If that wasn't the case, the admissions committees would just look at CVs. And I do think that generalists respond well to these. I always ask myself, if I was on this committee, would I be impressed by this person as a human (and not just as a person with that particular CV)? I think that's a good generalist question to ask. In other work we read, the question might be: "Would I be interested in reading beyond the introduction?"

    So glad you're in the class, Annie! I know the 303ers have really benefited from having you in their groups!

    ~mk

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