Showing posts with label Guest Stars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guest Stars. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 21, 2020

Pedagogical Possibilities: Translanguaging for the College Humanities Classroom

Signs in various languages indicating different locations. 
Photo by Soner Eker on Unsplash.

Today I have teamed up with a fantastic guest-poster.
Logan Middleton is a PhD student in writing studies who works with the Education Justice Project, a college-in-prison program in Illinois. (You may remember him from my enthusiastic posts about his work as a workshop leader: Writing Across Curriculum and Staying on Track With Thesis and Dissertation Writing.) His words are in regular case throughout, and my contributions, largely about how these topics relate to particular types of classrooms and disciplines, are italicized.



What Price Grammar?


From my experiences in teaching writing, the number one thing I hear from students of all ages is “I’m a bad writer.” If I ask why and dig a little deeper, it’s usually because someone has been told as such by a former teacher. Dig a little more, and I hear refrains to the tune of “My English is bad” or “My grammar is bad.” 


It’s not uncommon to hear from instructors or administrators that we need to ensure students can use “proper” English and grammar. Not only must we uphold “correctness,” they say, but we can’t conscionably let students go out into the real world with their writing looking like “that.” 


Statements such as these hurt students. From my experiences as an instructor and as a tutor, they not only make them dislike writing but also make them afraid to write. I recall working with one first-year college student who, in introducing me to her assignment prompt, said to me, “I’ve been told by teachers that I don’t communicate very well.” Though I can’t speak for this particular student, I have a hard time imagining them as feeling excited or good about their work—in their first semester of college nonetheless.


The ideologies undergirding statements about proper English and correctness not only hurt students but the rest of us as well. This is in no small part because they’re racist. This isn’t a particularly new or novel idea; I’ll say more about it in a bit. But I want to stay with this idea of grammar and how it relates to writing, teaching, and English.


It’s striking to me that people who claim English as a first language can often tell that something is “grammatically incorrect.” I find myself in this position often. Less often can we explain with any certainty why that’s the case. I also find myself in this position a lot as do students. Oftentimes, the things native English speakers can identify as grammatical rules are based on outdated folk models of grammar that were handed down by family or teachers, the likes of which would hardly be recognized as legit by contemporary theories of language. So contrary to what we might think or believe, our ideas of what English grammar should look like aren’t really all that sound or accurate.

Intriguingly, this sort of knowledge or memory is often something historians feel like they are combatting in their courses, letting students know that what feels true about historical figures, places, and ideas is not always what is actually true. Good historians know that they fall prey to these same patterns of thinking even as they combat them; writing and grammar is an arena where we rarely think to look for such patterns. 

All of this discussion about English and language and correctness matters because instructors who teach writing—many of whom have not been formally taught how to teach writing themselves (through no fault of their own)—are often concerned with assessing grammar in student work, especially when it comes to emergent bilingual or multilingual student populations. We know grammar is built upon sets of rules, but how can we enforce these standards in student work if we can’t even describe the mechanisms by which they operate? All of this becomes more problematic when instructors wield grammar as a tool of punishment in grading and feedback contexts, as a means of marking down student papers. Such logics operate in accordance with deviation from a set, centralized, universal standard of linguistic purity.

I find this particularly interesting in History because often it is very difficult to 1. Teach historical thinking and 2. Make a quick case about why historical thinking, specifically, is important. I often hear people make the case that history courses’ most critical contribution is to teach students how to write (okay, I have been guilty of emphasizing this myself at times). The more I teach, however-- and the more I learn about writing-- the more I question whether this is actually the core thing we do, and whether it is a worthwhile goal for historians in particular to do. Few instructors of history think it would be a worthwhile goal to spend several weeks on English grammar and syntax, yet they grade for these details. One takeaway here, then, is to clarify the central goals of your course-- what are you actually hoping that students take away from this course? If better writing is one of your goals, is it more critical that students follow your preferred grammar, or that they learn to organize their thoughts, or make a clear argument?

Against Purity 


Linguistic purity is a guiding feature of Dominant American English (DAE) or White Mainstream English (WME). These varieties of English, of which grammatical correctness is a part, function as ideologies that fundamentally exclude rhetorical and linguistic traditions that aren’t white, western, abled, or middle-classed: African American Language, Spanglish, and neurodivergent communication, to name a few examples (see the work of Django Paris, Carmen Kynard, Steven Alvarez, Christina V. Cedillo, and others). And while some well-intentioned instructors might say, “It’s OK to communicate like that at home, but not in your writing for this class,” what this comment really says is, “You can write or speak like that at home, but you(r languages) are not welcome here.” We can’t pretend that we can separate language from identity since we know language is social and cultural in nature. As many students will show us if given the chance—whether they’re multilingual students or not—our language practices are part of who we are.

Whether we realize it or not, linguistic purity often goes hand in hand with racial purity. Those students whose language most gets targeted in writing contexts are likely students of color, many of whom are international students and/or multilingual students (though, of course, these identity categories are not mutually exclusive). 

So when instructors claim that adhering to Dominant American English is preparation for the real world, I’m reminded of “I Can Switch My Language, But I Can't Switch My Skin" by the brilliant Dr. April Baker-Bell (a piece that students have responded really well to for the most part). Speaking of linguistic racism, she notes that communicating in WME doesn’t lead to guaranteed success for Black folx, it doesn’t prevent Black folx from being impacted by racism, and it certainly doesn’t help Black folx from being murdered. 

As I’ve previously touched upon (though I am far from the first to so so), there are a myriad of ways in which the people who are supposed to be promoting progressivism or providing aid or combating inequity in some of their work shore it up in other arenas. Similarly, many academics shore up white supremacist and imperialist ideals of writing and classroom comportment even as they critique these frameworks in their research. Their day-to-day functions butt up against their ideals. 

Disability scholar Sami Schalk contends academic work about people with disabilities exists that is not actually an example of "disability studies.” Disability studies, she contends, should be at its base for the benefit of disabled people as embodied and political actors. Work about disability or disabled subjects that does not do those things is disconnected from the field’s purpose. Similarly, there is a disconnect if we as teachers and scholars claim to be advocating for immigrants, people of color, people with disabilities, the subaltern, and/or the working class without also supporting the actual students from those communities by whom we find ourselves surrounded. 

Linguistic Justice 


By no means is what we do in our classrooms a solution to state-sanctioned murder or white (language) supremacy (for more on this term, see Asao Inoue’s 2019 conference address from the Conference on College Composition and Communication). But as instructors, we can do more to effect linguistic justice in the classroom. 

What’s this look like? For me, that means recognizing—and communicating to students—that academic language is a white, colonial, elite system of gatekeeping for people in power. It means making space for students to use their full linguistic repertoires in the classroom, to draw upon varieties of spoken and written languages in talk and text. And it means explicitly stating that language is not just linguistic in nature; it’s always entangled with visual, sonic, spatial, gestural, affective, and embodied communication. 

As a writing instructor, I speak with students on the first day of class about my course’s language policy—shoutout to María Carvajal Regidor for her work in writing this policy, which I’ve tweaked a bit. It appears in full below.

“The ways in which people are socialized into White Mainstream English and Academic English are often violent, damaging processes for multilingual and non-multilingual individuals alike. As such, I’m open to and encouraging of student work that represents or draws upon students’ full linguistic repertoires. That is to say, if you know multiple languages or codes and want to use them—either in written work you submit or verbally in the classroom—I’ll engage your contributions just as seriously as I would engage with more mainstream or academic forms of English. If there’s anything I can do to be more supportive of your language needs, please do speak with me so I can better support you. At any point in the semester, feel free to ask me, either during office hours or in class, about how I’d respond to work that isn’t communicated in ways that are traditionally valued in university spaces.”

I’ve found it important to frame things here in terms of an invitation. Just because students know multiple languages and language varieties doesn’t mean that they necessarily want to use them in a classroom setting. And so creating opportunities for students to possibly take up such practices—on their own terms and in a way that works best for them—can be a productive way of addressing language diversity in teaching situations, at least from a curricular point of view. 

Pedagogically speaking, I often invite students to interrogate their language histories, writing practices, and social identities by writing a critical linguistic autobiography. This assignment asks writers to take stock of the texts and contexts that shaped their language use and to address how their social identities shape how they use language. In the semesters I’ve used this assignment, students have written about affective interconnections between home, school, and Latinx identity; railed against gendered expectations about swearing in profanity-laced reflections; and blended autobiography with poetry in genre-bending mashups. Even for non-Black, non-brown, and non-POC students, this exercise can encourage students to think critically about how white (language) supremacy impacts dynamics of power when it comes to class, gender, sexuality, ability, and the manifold ways language is policed by others.

I’ll move to wrapping up here by returning to the issue of non-linguistic language as noted above. When we think of writing and language, English alphabetic text often comes to mind. But we’re always communicating beyond words—with image, talk, sound, movement, gesture, and affectively. Even though these forms of communication are critical in everyday life, they often go unrecognized as essential meaning-making practices. Such communicative practices are even more invalidated when performed by Black and brown populations (see Adam Banks and Geneva Smitherman) and disabled populations (see Melanie Yergeau) as well as other multiply minoritized people. 

So if we want to better enact linguistic justice, we not only need to address white supremacy through discussions of language diversity but we’ve also got to push back on narrow, restrictive notions of language, literacy, and writing—the likes of which exclude a host of rich, communicative practices. One of my former colleagues, Katherine Flowers, employs a language policy similar to the one discussed above that invites students to compose their work in whatever modalities (visual, sonic, etc.) that make the most sense for their project’s aims. Such a move both grants students the chance to critically think through what languages and modes will help them accomplish what they’re hoping to accomplish. When I’ve taken this approach in my own teaching, students have created final projects that I’d never have even thought of, texts as communicatively diverse and imaginative as choreographed dances and 3D-printed objects. So how we regulate the modes in which we communicate, too, is also a matter of linguistic justice.

Historians as well as other humanists already have the classroom tools for students to contribute their own knowledge or experience, and many of us have realized how much allowing students to do so invigorates a room full of thinkers. Consider how sparkling class discussions become when a student contributes unique knowledge of a source. In a discussion from this past semester on a selection of the Padma Purana, one of my students used his personal experience with the larger text not only to give the class additional context, but in doing so shed light on how the source was interpreted in the modern day as well as when the text was written. It became a living document in a way that I did not have the ability to make it. We encourage students to bring in their experiences frequently, or at least, we should-- their experience of language should be no different. 

Depending on your degree of teaching experience as well as what field you’re in, these steps toward teaching for linguistic justice might seem small or overwhelming, possible or inconceivable. In trying these strategies on, hopefully we can inch closer to a more just world—in our classroom and beyond.

Related Links:


A Pedagogy of Translanguaging offers some basic principles of translanguaging in classrooms of any level and discipline. 
For more on neurodivergent and neurotypical communication, Melanie Yergeau’s article from Disability Studies Quarterly examines these in the genre of the typical autism essay. 
Christina V. Cedillo’s “What Does It Mean to Move?: Race, Disability, and Critical Embodiment Pedagogy” is an excellent article that discusses connections between race, language, and neurodivergence.
Carmen Kynard’s website provides a range of scholarship, pedagogical resources, and commentary on race, writing, and teaching.
(Sub)title Talk: What Price Glory?


Wednesday, August 15, 2018

Enough About Me: Social Networks as Teaching Support

Table laden with laptops, phones, and stationery items. By Marvin Meyer on Unsplash.
There are a few really good gifts we can give ourselves in life, and one of them is learning how and when to seek out advice. Social media offers a lot of opportunities to do this with relatively low investment: we throw our question, minor or major, out into the world and see who might be willing to try answering it.

I was inspired to think on this when both I and a colleague of mine posted teaching related questions on Facebook within a few weeks of one another. I appreciated all the suggestions for video games that deal with American history that I had received in response to my query. When fellow Illinois PhD student in History Taryn Vaughn asked a question online about helping students build vocabulary, I noticed the variety and quality of answers she received and contacted her to chat about social media as a tool for teaching support. We decided to share our thoughts in a blog post (her words are italicized throughout). Along the way, I reached out (in a Facebook status, naturally) to see what others might be moved to say on the topic. So, join us in taking a break from scrolling to consider some benefits of the Internet Ask:


It gives you variety

Personal networks are extremely powerful, and it's likely that (despite constant fretting that we all live in monocultural echo chambers) you have connections to people with a broad variety of experiences. Asking for teaching help online has the potential to draw a wider variety of respondents than you would asking around your department/workplace/family mansion, especially if you're trying to find unexpected sources or ideas. I recently used Facebook to ask about video games that deal with historical subjects for the course I'm planning and was pleasantly surprised at the flood of useful responses I received-- some from other historians, some from people I hadn't talked to since high school. Taryn appreciated this aspect of the Internet Ask: "Any of my friends or followers or what have you can see my post so I can get advice from that friend who’s studying law, from that one high school teacher I haven’t thought of in years, from that poet friend I haven’t seen in a while, all without having to specifically search them out." This variety of respondents helped me feel as though I wouldn't miss anything that would seem too glaring to the students-- I'd hate to have my class say halfway through the semester "Why didn't you pick this game for our class, it would have been perfect!" and have to respond "Uh, because I live under a rock and have never heard of that one."

The variety of respondents to a query can result in a corresponding variety in the answers offered, which can be useful not only for getting a big pool of ideas in order to pull out a few, but also for situations in which you want to be able to show students a variety of options. Kateri Smith, a foster care specialist at the Oklahoma Department of Human Services, has used social media to accumulate a variety of responses to questions she later asked as part of trainings for teenagers in foster care: "A lot of what I do is about getting kids to think in an out of the box way about big, emotional subjects like family, success, & healing. When I first created the curriculum for one of the sessions, I asked people the same questions I would later ask the teens. This gave me a great variety of answers from different demographics so I could put some on a worksheet to demonstrate how not-black-and-white the topics could be. I think it was really important that the teens could see how people from across the country of different ages, races, and backgrounds had dealt with some of the things they were feeling." Students are wide-ranging, and can benefit from an instructor's attention to and appreciation of that truth.

 

…But not too much variety

Conversely, social media appeals for information can be limited in useful ways. I've occasionally participated in a Facebook group designed for instructors who use Reacting to the Past games in their classrooms to ask questions and to share tips, which not only keeps the secret twists and turns of each game from public eyes but also connects me to people guaranteed to have at least SOME idea of what I'm talking about. Using groups can also save you some time and effort by cutting down on extraneous advice. Sarah Morice Brubaker, Assistant Professor of Theology at Phillips Theological Seminary, uses a Facebook group to post her questions in order to maximize useful suggestions and minimize unhelpful comments. "Even though not all of the suggestions offered would work in my own classes -- because of theological perspective of the school, grad v. undergrad, and other norms specific to the institution -- I find it a lot more helpful putting an appeal there than putting out an appeal to Facebook or Twitter at large. Especially Facebook. There's a small but enthusiastic share of my Facebook friends who seem derive pleasure from giving advice the way a beagle dog derives pleasure from barking. And, er, it tends not to matter to them whether they have the requisite knowledge base or experience to offer useful advice." So, for specialized questions or if you just need a few good answers, groups can be a great way to limit responses. 

Others can see it

When you put a question out into the big wide world (or the small limited group), others can also benefit from seeing the post. I think this is especially useful for making what we do as teachers reach wider audiences. It draws broader attention to the topic being discussed-- you never know who on your friends list might decide to pick up a book or check out a website because of someone's suggestion. It demystifies the teaching prep process: no, the curriculum doesn't all come out of a textbook-- we're working to make it here, together, right now! It also helps other teachers, as Taryn notes firsthand: "I’ve posted on Facebook asking for advice on a specific teaching issue in the hopes of getting a wide variety of different perspectives on the problem. Before actually posting myself, though, I also saw my other teaching friends post their own questions on Facebook. I found it really useful to read the responses that people gave them. Sometimes the questions and answers spoke to questions I already had, but had not yet asked, sometimes they spoke to issues I hadn’t even considered before, but either way, seeing what other teachers are asking and the solutions their Facebook friends provide is just as useful to me as posting a question myself."

It gives you confidence

Taryn noted something that I hadn't appreciated: perhaps paradoxically, asking others for advice in this way can help you to trust your own instincts. As she put it, "I think the most valuable thing that I’ve gotten from social media in this regard is the advice that actually confirmed ideas that I had already had. When someone recommends something that I had already considered doing, it helps me trust my own instincts as an instructor. I’ve only just started teaching and before I reached out on social media, I felt paralyzed by my own lack of experience. I had no idea what I was doing. I had ideas, sure, but how was I supposed to know if they were any good? I convinced myself that they probably weren’t. Then I asked my Facebook friends and while some pointed me to resources that I had never heard of or considered, many of my friends suggested the very ideas that had been floating around in my head. 
Furthermore, just the simple act of asking for advice helped me to start thinking of solutions to my own question. It was as if putting the question out there helped me to separate myself from the problem and view it more objectively, whereas before, my fear of personal failure had stopped me from even wanting to think about it."
 

You can ask about almost anything without figuring out who to ask

There are some times when you want specific answers to a question. What games relate to US history between 1600 and 1920? That's a pretty rigid boundary. But other times, you're thinking broadly, or you're not sure what kind of responses you want. Maybe you want to get a sense of what other people think about a topic or a genre of thing. Maybe you have a question for which you know there is no solid, single answer, or maybe it's on a topic that you know so little of that you don't even know who might know of good answers.

None of that matters in the Internet Ask! It's your rodeo. Ask away. Any of these kinds of questions have the potential to be answered. Taryn notes that she thinks she'll continue to use social media for teaching questions and may in the future expand from more specific queries to murkier, harder-to-approach questions: "The last time I was looking for resources (like apps or websites) and/or class activities to help students improve their vocabulary. What I didn’t ask in my last post, but what I think I’ll ask about in my next one if I can figure out how to word the question, is how to structure a class that I myself will be comfortable leading. Newbie that I am, I’m not really sure what my teaching style will or should be when I attempt for the first time to teach history. It’s not simply that I’m not sure how to help my future students understand the material (though that is certainly one of my concerns). My question is: how can a pretty introverted and shy person like me engage students without exhausting my limited social endurance? How do I structure a class that draws on my strengths instead of preying on my weaknesses? I want to teach in a way that’s sustainable for me, and in a way that allows both outgoing and shy students to learn and participate."

 

It can lead you in directions you didn't expect

I'll conclude with a brief recounting of both my and Taryn's experiences at seeking teaching advice from social media, which should illustrate the broad pathways for action that this can open and reinforce some of the other benefits mentioned above.

When I asked for video games, I got suggestions from a wide variety of comers. I looked up several of these and decided to add one or two to my syllabus (it's still in flux, as it will be until the moment of truth on day 1, probably-- there's always something that could be BETTER, right?). However, another of the suggestions I hadn't yet played. Assassin's Creed III had been on my Steam wishlist for some time, but it had not been on sale. I had already been in touch with a librarian about the gaming initiative for the final game of the course, Valiant Hearts. So I was aware of the existence of the gaming center, but hadn't yet been down there. My curiosity led me to find the disc (on a separate floor of the library); bring it back to the gaming center; check out the key to the gaming center, the Xbox controller, and the headphones; put it all together-- and sit and wait for the Xbox to download some necessary piece of the game. I never did get to play Assassin's Creed III that day. But I did learn how to use the gaming center, and prepare students for any issues that might arise when they try to use it to play Valiant Hearts or any other games I might assign in future. (And Assassin's Creed III went on sale on Steam just a few weeks later-- kismet!) Even though I likely won't assign that particular game due to time constraints, the suggestion led me in a helpful direction that I couldn't have predicted.
 

Says Taryn: "The last time I asked for advice on social media, I was able to cobble together a workable teaching style from the varied advice I got. I had asked about vocabulary building and most of my friends stressed the importance of context. Students need to see words in context, they need to use words in context. One of my Facebook friends, who also stressed the need for context, is a Spanish teacher at my former high school. When he commented on my post it reminded me of the Spanish class I took in my junior year of high school. Every day our teacher would come to class with a list of vocabulary words or structures (phrases that highlighted different grammatical rules) and we would use them to make up stories. Each student would get a turn to speak and sentence by sentence, we would create a story, usually ridiculous, using the vocabulary for the day.
 

I decided to take that strategy and modify it for my own purposes. Instead of a spoken exercise, like it had been in my Spanish class, I turned it into a written one. I made note of the words that my students had difficulty with, and the next day I came with a list of words, announcing that we would write stories, no matter how ridiculous, using that day’s vocabulary. I wrote too, [which] allowed me to warm up each day to the prospect of speaking in front of a crowd because writing and reading my own silly stories for them was somehow less terrifying than just talking. It allowed me to show them my personality and allowed them to show me theirs. It gave the outgoing ones a chance to share and the shy ones a chance to participate without exposing themselves to scrutiny. And it was everyone’s favorite class activity.
 

I never would have thought to do it if my high school teacher hadn’t commented on my post, and I never would have thought to ask him for advice otherwise… the fact that social media allows you to address many different people from many different backgrounds all at once is its biggest strength. If I had limited myself to what I could pick up in the TA office, I wouldn’t have hit on a strategy that suited both me and my students."

Have you used social media to help your teaching, or have you learned anything from others' queries?