Sharing and Responding: My Turn
I
had never really thought much about giving feedback to other’s writing. When we
had to switch papers in school or if a friend asked me to look over their paper
before handing it in, I always looked for grammatical errors and stated which
areas I enjoyed, which areas I found vague, and which areas were generally
weak. I never really thought about responding to people’s writing differently
than this, as this was how teachers had always responded to my work.
Elbow
and Belanoff call attention to this in “Sharing and Responding” when they
state, “For if you simply ask someone to give you feedback or response to what
you’ve written and don’t give any help or direction, they will probably just
imitate the responses they remember getting from teachers,” (46).
After
reading this text I realize that I have not been giving good feedback and that
it is my responsibility as a reader and writer myself to acknowledge this and
do better. While I was not fully aware of all the different ways to respond, I
did always feel like I could be doing better. I felt like I was not being as
helpful as I could be. Now that I have eleven ways to respond to writing I feel
more prepared for Tuesday’s class when we read each other’s writing history papers,
and for helping my future students with their writing.
I
definitely will use this in my classroom however I will not be the only one in
my classroom using this. While I as the teacher will be using this to help my
students become better writers, I feel like this would be especially helpful if
I teach my students these techniques as well, instead of just letting them
guess their way through responses like I used to.
I can develop lessons where students bring in
their rough drafts like we will be doing Tuesday, but instead of just letting
them switch with the person next to them (like I did in high school), the lesson
will involve learning these different ways to respond to writing and then
responding to each other’s writing. This way they become more involved as
readers but also better writers. Perhaps I would even put them in groups of
four instead of pairs so that way they got more feedback from different
readers.
Overall,
this text was very insightful. It taught me how to be a better reader and responder
and is something that I will want to bring into my classroom!
I like the quote that you chose as I think that it is essential to receiving the most useful feedback. The thing that I like most about written responses is that it allows the readers to write what they feel and how they respond, without having to worry about what other students are saying about the same piece. This keeps their opinions very honest and not defined by their peers.
ReplyDeleteI also enjoyed the quote you chose as I also thought it was really interesting. I agree that this text was infightful and useful because it tells us how we need to read in order to improve writing, if that makes any sense. There is definitely a lot of important information from Elbow and Belanoff that we will be able to use in our teching careers!
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