Abstract
There are obvious dangers in talking about problems of literacy on college campuses. Perhaps the greatest danger is that we think we are making a precise distinction when we say that some students have it and others don’t. It seems obvious to us that students come with diverse skills as readers and writers and that this diversity can be segmented and arranged —usually, or at least initially, in a binary opposition: marginal or mainstream, remedial or regular, noncredit or credit, English 101 or Basic Writing.1 I don’t question that students bring diverse skills to our classrooms, nor do I question either the pedagogical value of grouping students according to levels of ability or (and this is a more difficult admission) distinctions that place some students on the margins of the university while placing others in the center. It is in the nature of intellectual work to force distinctions between the center and the margins. Most of us would say that our lives as students were marked initially by a struggle to enter into those habits of mind (those ways of reading and writing) that define the center of English Studies, just as many of us would say that the later stages were marked by a desire to push against that center —to debate, redefine the terrain, and establish a niche that somehow seemed to be our own. (In fact, in my ideal curriculum, the most advanced students would be pushed toward the margins and not into the center of the work represented by university study.2) I do, however, think there is reason to examine the assumptions about the nature of literate skills represented by the decisions we make in placement exams or tracking procedures.
The term BW student is an abstraction that can easily get in the way of teaching. Not all BW students have the same problems; not all students with the same problems have them for the same reasons. There are styles to being wrong. This is, perversely, where the individuality of inexperienced writers tends to show up, rather than in the genuine semantic, syntactic and conceptual options that are available to the experienced writer.
— Mina Shaughnessy (Errors and E xpectations 40)
For those who approach literary studies with literary sensitivity, an immediate problem arises. They cannot overlook style, their own or that of others. Through their concern with literature they have become aware that understanding is a mediated activity and that style is an index of how the writer deals with the consciousness of mediation. Style is not cognitive only; it is also recognitive, a signal betraying the writer’s relation, or sometimes the relation of a type of discourse, to a historical and social world.
— Geoffrey H. Hartman (” The Culture of Criticism” 371)
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Bartholomae, D. (2005). Writing on the Margins: The Concept of Literacy in Higher Education. In: Writing on the Margins. Palgrave Macmillan, New York. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4039-8439-5_6
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