Leaning Into Difficulty: A Way of Building Knowledge in a Developmental Reading and Writing Course

Authors

  • Barrie McGee Texas State University, Dept. of English

Keywords:

integrated reading and writing, developmental education, developmental reading and writing, rosenblatt

Abstract

DOI: https://doi.org/10.36896/4.1pp1

Recognition of the interconnectedness of the reading and writing processes is not a new concept. Indeed, the developmental nature of reading and writing is shown to have evolved over time (Nelson & Calfee, 1998) and has been the focus of empirical research grounded on three basic theoretical models: shared cognition (two buckets drawing water from a common well), sociocognitive (envisioned as a conversation), and combined-use model (tools that can be used together to build something) (Shanahan, 2016). I am particularly intrigued by the sociocognitive model of reading and writing as a conversation as both mirror closely the spirit of Rosenblatt’s (2013) transactional view of the relationship among the text, the reader, and the author. The theory Rosenblatt promoted requires a paradigm shift that problematizes the dualistic notion of subjectobject, individual-social, and stimulus-response that are insufficient to represent the recursive, “one process” that the knower, the knowing, and the known enact, each conditioning the other in linguistic activities (pp. 926–927). For example, when a student transacts with a text, they draw from linguistic and experiential knowledge bases (reservoirs) to derive an interpretation. Difficulties can arise when knowledge bases are inadequate to form a clear understanding of a text, yet working through the difficulties results in structuring new meaning. The work involved in the struggle is generative (Bartholemae & Petrosky, 1986). Rather than an interaction that may close off the opportunity for students to build new knowledge, ‘“meaning’ happens during the transaction” (p. 929). Rosenblatt and others (i.e., Bakhtin, 1981; Gadamer, 1975; Iser, 1978) provided sound theories to justify designing fully integrated reading and writing (IRW) courses. To clarify, fully integrated as I use it here is distinct in that it references Rosenblatt’s notion of the similar processes that reading and writing share as well as the ideal instruction in which neither reading nor writing are privileged in service to the other but are considered interconnected literacy practices in a dialogically centered classroom. Such instruction, however, is another matter.

Author Biography

  • Barrie McGee, Texas State University, Dept. of English

    Barrie McGee is a PhD student in developmental education at Texas State University with a concentration in literacy. She holds an MA in rhetoric and composition and a BA in English (writing and rhetoric concentration). Her research interests include terminology/discourses referencing the field of developmental education and its effects on professional identity, pedagogy, and attitudes of practitioners in the field.

References

Bakhtin, M. M. (1981). The dialogic imagination: Four essays by M. M. Bakhtin. Ed. M. Holquist. Trans. Caryl Emerson and Michael Holquist. University of Texas Press.

Bartholemae, D., & Petrosky, A. (1986). Facts, artifacts, and counterfacts. Boynton/Cook Publishers.

Freire, P. (1968). Pedagogy of the oppressed. Seabury.

Gadamer, H. (1975). Truth and method. Continuum.

Iser, W. (1978). The act of reading: A theory of aesthetic response. Johns Hopkins University Press. https://doi.org/10.56021/9780801821011

Nelson, N., & Calfee, R. C. (1998). The reading-writing connection viewed historically. In N. Nelson & R. C. Calfee (Eds.), Ninety-seventh Yearbook of the National Society for the Study of Education (Part II, pp. 1-40). National Society for the Study of Education. https://doi.org/10.1177/016146819809900601

Rosenblatt, L. M. (2013). The transactional theory of reading and writing. In D. E. Alvermann, J. J. Unrau, & R. B. Ruddell (Eds.), Theoretical Models and Processes of Reading (6th Ed.) (pp. 923-956). International Reading Association. https://doi.org/10.1598/0710.35

Salvatori, M. (1996). Conversations with texts: Reading in the teaching of composition. College English, 58(4), 440-454. https://doi.org/10.2307/378854

Shanahan, T. (2016). Relationships between reading and writing development. In C. A. MacArthur, S. Graham, & J. Fitzgerald (Eds.), Handbook of Writing Research (pp. 194-207). The Guilford Press.

Sweeney, M. A., & McBride, M. (2015). Difficulty paper (dis)connections: Understanding the threads students weave between their reading and writing. College Composition and Communication 66(4), 591-614. https://www.jstor.org/stable/43491902

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Published

2021-08-04

Issue

Section

Promising Practices

How to Cite

Leaning Into Difficulty: A Way of Building Knowledge in a Developmental Reading and Writing Course. (2021). Journal of College Academic Support Programs, 4(1), 4. https://jcasp-ojs-txstate.tdl.org/jcasp/article/view/140

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