Basic Goals and Assumptions of the Course
Writing for Business and Professions is designed to prepare students
for the writing activities they will encounter in their chosen profession.
Our pedagogy follows the paradigm of composition practiced in the Rutgers
University Writing Program, commonly referred to as the dialogic or
"conversation model," in which students are encouraged to situate themselves
within a discourse and to recognize the social settings that structure
all acts of writing. This is not a course that gives students practice
writing empty forms; it's a course about learning to convert information
into knowledge and action in a specific context. We do not train future
secretaries or writers of computer software instruction manuals; we
train future managers and "knowledge workers." Students need to recognize
that we can never teach them the specific "forms" of writing they will
need at their workplace, since every organization (or culture of writing)
will use unique formats and styles. But we can teach them how to lead
through knowledge and how to use models as guides to a writing culture's
expectations. We hope to teach writing as a basic skill in any career,
not as a set of templates to use in a specific job.
The main work your students will undertake this semester is a project
proposal, which is an original proposal justified by research. The project
is designed to give students practice as "knowledge workers" -- that
is, as managers who are capable of using information and rational argument
to make decisions and lead others. The best way for students to approach
the project is to identify and define a problem and then research ways
of approaching that problem that could justify a plan of action. Students
should ideally try to situate their work within a paradigm and discuss
the works of key proponents of their approach. They should not focus
exclusively on their plan or on answering questions about "how" they
will proceed; they need to answer "why" (or, "why this way") as well.
If they do that, they will come to recognize that their assumptions
and ideas are already embedded in a conversation where there are at
least some points of consensus. In other words, they will have entered
the discourse of their chosen field.
In order for students to join the conversation in their field, they
will often have to read difficult texts at a relatively high level of
abstraction. Therefore, as in all composition courses, our emphasis
in teaching needs to be as much on strong reading as it is on strong
writing. The coursepack has several rather difficult readings which
are intended to give students a chance to practice reading and making
sense of difficult texts -- something many of them are surprisingly
ill prepared to do. These texts also introduce students to key concepts,
such "paradigm" or "knowledge worker," which will help them think and
speak abstractly about their projects.
Since the project for the course requires individual effort and active
student participation, teachers usually encourage students to work in
groups, not only for peer review of drafts but for peer discussion of
readings. Though occasional lectures can be helpful, you should mostly
see yourself as the "guide by the side" rather than "the sage on the
stage." Your job is to facilitate your students' independent work. Whenever
possible, you should try to de-emphasize your role as "expert" and encourage
the students to see themselves as developing the problem solving skills
that are the hallmark of expertise. Encourage your students to work
independently and actively in shaping their projects and seeking advice
from subject area experts (such as advisers, professors, or professionals
in their field of interest). Also, you should not focus undue attention
on issues of grammar and syntax in comments on early versions of the
project; instead, focus on helping students develop their ideas and
fill in gaps in research. While it is important to work in class on
specific issues of "prose polishing," that work is most helpful in the
late stages of drafting and should not shift the focus away from students'
struggles to revise a strong and thoughtful project full of content
as well as style.
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