Comparison
of WRT 101 and WRT 102*
|
|
WRT 101 |
WRT 102 |
A student in the writing classroom is:
|
Community |
Participating effectively
in the context of a writing class. |
Extending the community
of writers beyond the classroom. |
|
Writing Process |
Becoming aware of one’s
writing process and knowing terms related to this process, such as
“prewriting,” “peer review,” “revising,” “editing.” |
Taking control of one’s
own writing process. Learning to adjust the process for the purpose. |
|
Critical Thinking |
Developing a consciousness
of writing as a social and communicative act. Moving beyond reporting,
synthesis, or summary to reflection, interpretation, and analysis. |
Critically engaging multiple
perspectives. |
|
Critical Reading |
Reading a variety of challenging
texts with assistance as needed. Recognizing and evaluating the rhetorical
choices made in a text. Some texts should be conceptual and thesis-driven
non-fiction. |
Reading a variety of complex
texts with independence. Emphasis on evaluating sources. |
|
Genre Knowledge |
Becoming aware of various
audiences and genres, including academic audience and genres, and
a thesis-driven essay. |
Increasing awareness of
academic discourse. More emphasis on thesis-driven essays. |
|
Rhetorical Strategies |
Learning rhetorical strategies to develop ideas. Developing
rhetorical awareness (audience, and manipulation of text to meet purpose
and audience needs).
|
Independently choosing rhetorical
strategies best suited to purpose or audience. |
|
Analysis |
Writing essays with analytical,
interpretive components, including analysis of written texts. |
Continuing to develop abilities
to independently analyze texts, including written texts. |
|
Research Skills |
Using outside sources to
explore an idea, question, or thesis. Integrating sources into a text,
handling quotations, using a standard documentation style to
give appropriate credit to sources. |
Incorporating independent
research into an essay that takes a position. Incorporating multiple
sources with distinct perspectives (including scholarly sources that move beyond the scope of popular magazines
and non-scholarly websites)
into a single paper. More emphasis on integrating sources into a text,
handling quotations, using a standard documentation style to
give appropriate credit to sources. |
|
Voice |
Experimenting with voice
from different perspectives. |
Controlling the use of
voice and diction as part of a rhetorical strategy. |
|
Personal/ Academic |
Discovering the connections
between academic inquiry and one's own interests and experiences. |
Making connections between
academic inquiry and one's own interests and experiences. |
|
Editing Skills/ Proofreading |
Improving grammar, usage,
mechanics, development and organization in context as needed. |
Mastering grammar, usage,
mechanics, development and organization in context as needed. Learning
to control style. |
*This comparison was approved by the full-time faculty of the Program in Writing and Rhetoric on May 15, 2003.