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August 2001

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Subject:
From:
"Kischner, Michael" <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Assembly for the Teaching of English Grammar <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 31 Aug 2001 11:16:37 -0700
Content-Type:
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I teach a college-level grammar class created by my colleague Edith Wollin.
It is centered on traditional syntax.  Students use Kellogg-Reed diagramming
to analyze syntactical structures and then use sentence combining and
sentence composing to practice using the structures in their own writing.

Most of the students love the class and recommend it to their friends.  The
interesting thing is that neither Edith nor I does anything special to "make
the class interesting."  Because of the quantity of material, we are forced
to keep up a relentless forward movement, and there is no time for
diversion.  (One student was heard telling another, "This is the one class I
absolutely won't miss.  I'll skip a math class occasionally, but this
grammar class you don't dare miss a dayof!")  We do have students work in
pairs and groups, but that's about it for variety.     Yet they love the
class.  Why?  We figure it has something to do with our own enthusiasm for
the material and our secure grasp of it.  At the end of each class, most of
the student know something they did not know when they came in. The class
builds knowledge incrementally in the best Piaget fashion, and as the
students' diagrams get more and more intricate, they take more and more
delight in building them.  I suppose I should also point out the
all-important fact that the class is an elective.  There is nothing like
teaching students who have signed on to what is being taught.

Edith and Wollin have written a textbook for instructors who wish to include
instruction in grammar and style in a college composition class.  It does
not use sentence diagramming. It teaches syntactic structures in a compact
way and then moves quickly to how students can apply knowledge of these
structures to their own writing.  The book is Writers' Choices: Grammar to
Improve Style; it is published by Harcourt College Publishers.  People
wanting to see a sample copy can get one from [log in to unmask]
> ----------
> From:         Cheryl Richey
> Reply To:     Assembly for the Teaching of English Grammar
> Sent:         Friday, August 31, 2001 9:57 AM
> To:   [log in to unmask]
> Subject:      Something is haunting me.
>
> A while back a professor wrote to this group asking how he could make a
> seemingly boring grammar book, the name I will not repeat, more
> interesting for his uninterested students.  Someone answered back
> something along the line that it is hard to interest the uninterested.  It
> is haunting me that I never answered my opinion on the issue.
>
> One of the most important things taught during a teaching credential
> program is that it is the teacher/professor's responsibility to make the
> material interesting.  I would recommend taking an interactive approaches
> class.  Learn different strategies and methods to get the students up,
> working together, and getting to know each other.  Do you know how many
> adults watch and enjoy games?  They play on baseball teams, watch Wheel of
> Fortune, Jeopardy, they sing in the church choir, etc.  Make it fun!
> Their interest will follow.
>

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