Personal tools
Share This Page
Facebook
del.icio.us
StumbleUpon
Site Sponsors

Thanks to the COM352 students for contributing a bunch of new pages! I'll be moving these pages into the main area of the wiki soon.

Class:Section 68, ENG112/Lesson Plans/Day 6/Self as Writer

From UMassWiki

Jump to: navigation, search

Self As Writer

We are all writers. College Writing is based on this assumption-that we are all writers and that as writers we grow and develop by writing and working through the steps of the writing process. I know some of you don't believe me. I know some of you are right now thinking: "I don't care what she says-I'm not a writer." Some of you are right. You may not be a fiction writer. You may not be a poet. You may not have published something in a magazine or journal. You may not have sold a story or essay or screenplay. That is okay. You may not be that kind of writer (yet). But there are different ways to define "writer"-meaning there are different ways to be a writer.

As a class, we will begin with the assumption that whenever anyone writes something she is a writer-at least for that moment. But are we the same kind of writer all the time? For example, when I'm writing my novel, am I the same kind of writer as when I'm writing an essay? Am I the same kind of writer as when I'm writing this handout for class? Are there some things that always remain the same regardless of what kind of writing we do? Are there some things that change? Another way to say all this is: How does the specific writing situation or context shape and influence what we write and how we define ourselves as writers?

As a way to begin examining these questions, your first essay will explore the ways you have been and currently are a writer. Select one or two "moments" that illustrate the ways you have been a writer in at least two of the writing assignments we’ve had to date. You may compare/contrast these with other writing you’ve done in other contexts, or focus on them exclusively.

Although we will be taking this essay through the four-step process, it won't be "finished"-meaning how we see ourselves as writers is something that constantly changes. We will be returning to this question throughout the semester as well as when we begin our last unit, the Writer's Reflection.

Academics
Student Life
Food
Recreation
Campus
Local
fb Was this article useful? Please spread the word and share on Facebook!