Thursday, October 13, 2011

Affective Dimensions of Writing

I think of myself as a writer of necessity.  My career as a student has to led to more writing for assignments and grades than writing for myself.  I usually have one or two writing assignments each week and I think that number is plenty.  I want to do more writing for myself.  I want to create a blog for myself.  I have been thinking of what I would want to write about and how I would write about myself. 

I am a list maker.  I love lists.  But more than just lists, I love to cross everything off my list and throw it away.  I sometimes find myself adding things that I have done just so I can cross them off.  I feel so accomplished when I finish a list.  I am just like my mom in this way.  She always had a list that she would add things.  I have a feature on my cell phone called "memo."  I always have at least eight memos.  I delete and add to the memos constantly.  I also use drawings to express my ideas or needs.  This comes in handy at work.  I plant decorative flowers pots for people.  I keep a journal of every pot I plant each season.  This journal includes both a drawing and a list of plants.  It is great because people will come back the next season and want pots the same or like certain plants and not know what plant they want.  I can refer back to my journal and give my customers exactly what they want.  It has made my job a thousand times easier.  Another type of writing I use every day is text messaging.  I text my friends and family.  It is so much easier than calling, especially when I just have a quick question or can't talk on the phone.  I use my facebook account to update my friends and family on my life or funny things that happen.  My little sister and I have conversations via facebook messages. 
Usually the reason why I liked or disliked the writing assignment was directly related to the relevance or the relevance I felt the assignment had to the class or the topic.  One assignment I remember disliking was a questionnaire for the book The Hiding Place.  The questions were more related to the dates of each event, like what day were the ten Booms discovered?  I didn't understand why the teacher was focusing on those facts when the bigger more important issues where being ignored.  I hated that assignment.  To this day I can't understand the point of that assignment. 
I want to make writing a part of my classes in a way that is cohesive and makes sense to my students.  I don't want my students to question the relevance of any assignment I give them.  On the same note, I want to use differentiation as a part of my instruction.  Every large assignment would be different and more tailored to each students needs and likes.  I wish I would have had more opportunity as a student to pick how I would show my knowledge.

3 comments:

  1. I love you first sentence "I am a writer of necessity." I am the same way, I also make to do lists constantly, text, and Facebook. I love that you design decorative flower pots and think that is a great way to keep track of each pot. I think that it would something that I could use with students in a floriculture class. I think that would give students an opportunity to write something that had application. Thanks for the great idea!

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  2. Journaling - one of the best things a human can do for themselves, those they interact with, and those that come after them. One of my methods teachers showed us how she wrote in a journal after every day teaching. Things that went tell, what to change/improve, what was done, etc. She had many reasons she gave us about why it was such a good idea to do that. But it makes it hard sometimes for all the things in our life that could make a good journal. Journaling for work seems so boring though sometimes, even when we know how much it will help us in the future!

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  3. I was so glad that Francisca wrote a comment on your blog because I was just about to recommend it to her and to Andy. That's a great use of writing--a very authentic use of writing--to organize your thoughts in florticulture.

    I am totally a list-maker too. I don't like keeping digital lists, though--my grandmother gave me a "Reading Woman" calendar book that is very sentimental to me. I just like the aesthetics of writing in it. For me, it's both aesthetic writing and functional writing.

    My last comment to you is that I loved your insight about The Hiding Place. That is such an applicable lesson to your work as a history teacher--instead of primarily asking factual questions, you can ask bigger theme, bigger picture questions to help students really engage in the issues that have driven the human experience over time.

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