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Sunday, August 30, 2015

On Writing: Your Ultimate Dream

The Writing Assignment That Changes Lives

NPR     July 10, 2015

by Anya Kementz   



Why do you do what you do? What is the engine that keeps you up late at night or gets you going in the morning? Where is your happy place? What stands between you and your ultimate dream?

Heavy questions. One researcher believes that writing down the answers can be decisive for students.

He co-authored a paper that demonstrates a startling effect: nearly erasing the gender and ethnic minority achievement gap for 700 students over the course of two years with a short written exercise in setting goals.

Jordan Peterson teaches in the department of psychology at the University of Toronto. For decades, he has been fascinated by the effects of writing on organizing thoughts and emotions.

Experiments going back to the 1980s have shown that "therapeutic" or "expressive" writing can reduce depression, increase productivity and even cut down on visits to the doctor.

"The act of writing is more powerful than people think," Peterson says.

Most people grapple at some time or another with free-floating anxiety that saps energy and increases stress. Through written reflection, you may realize that a certain unpleasant feeling ties back to, say, a difficult interaction with your mother. That type of insight, research has shown, can help locate, ground and ultimately resolve the emotion and the associated stress.

At the same time, "goal-setting theory" holds that writing down concrete, specific goals and strategies can help people overcome obstacles and achieve.

'It turned my life around'

Recently, researchers have been getting more and more interested in the role that mental motivation plays in academic achievement — sometimes conceptualized as "grit" or "growth mindset" or "executive functioning."

Peterson wondered whether writing could be shown to affect student motivation. He created an undergraduate course called Maps of Meaning. In it, students complete a set of writing exercises that combine expressive writing with goal-setting.

Students reflect on important moments in their past, identify key personal motivations and create plans for the future, including specific goals and strategies to overcome obstacles. Peterson calls the two parts "past authoring" and "future authoring."

"It completely turned my life around," says Christine Brophy, who, as an undergraduate several years ago, was battling drug abuse and health problems and was on the verge of dropping out. After taking Peterson's course at the University of Toronto, she changed her major. Today she is a doctoral student and one of Peterson's main research assistants.

In an early study at McGill University in Montreal, the course showed a powerful positive effect with at-risk students, reducing the dropout rate and increasing academic achievement.

Peterson is seeking a larger audience for what he has dubbed "self-authoring." He started a for-profit company and is selling a version of the curriculum online. Brophy and Peterson have found a receptive audience in the Netherlands.

At the Rotterdam School of Management, a shortened version of self-authoring has been mandatory for all first-year students since 2011. (These are undergraduates — they choose majors early in Europe).

The latest paper, published in June, compares the performance of the first complete class of freshmen to use self-authoring with that of the three previous classes.

Overall, the "self-authoring" students greatly improved the number of credits earned and their likelihood of staying in school. And after two years, ethnic and gender-group differences in performance among the students had all but disappeared.

The ethnic minorities in question made up about one-fifth of the students. They are first- and second-generation immigrants from non-Western backgrounds — Africa, Asia and the Middle East.

While the history and legacy of racial oppression are different from that in the United States, the Netherlands still struggles with large differences in wealth and educational attainment among majority and minority groups.

'Zeroes are deadly'

At the Rotterdam school, minorities generally underperformed the majority by more than a third, earning on average eight fewer credits their first year and four fewer credits their second year. But for minority students who had done this set of writing exercises, that gap dropped to five credits the first year and to just one-fourth of one credit in the second year.

How could a bunch of essays possibly have this effect on academic performance? Is this replicable?

Melinda Karp is the assistant director for staff and institutional development at the Community College Research Center at Teachers College, Columbia University. She leads studies on interventions that can improve college completion. She calls Peterson's paper "intriguing." But, she adds, "I don't believe there are silver bullets for any of this in higher ed.

"Peterson believes that formal goal-setting can especially help minority students overcome what's often called "stereotype threat," or, in other words, to reject the damaging belief that generalizations about ethnic-group academic performance will apply to them personally.

Karp agrees. "When you enter a new social role, such as entering college as a student, the expectations aren't always clear." There's a greater risk for students who may be academically underprepared or who lack role models. "Students need help not just setting vague goals but figuring out a plan to reach them.

"The key for this intervention came at crunch time, says Peterson. "We increased the probability that students would actually take their exams and hand in their assignments." The act of goal-setting helped them overcome obstacles when the stakes were highest. "You don't have to be a genius to get through school; you don't even have to be that interested. But zeroes are deadly."

Karp has a theory for how this might be working. She says you often see at-risk students engage in self-defeating behavior "to save face."

"If you aren't sure you belong in college, and you don't hand in that paper," she explains, "you can say to yourself, 'That's because I didn't do the work, not because I don't belong here.'

"Writing down their internal motivations and connecting daily efforts to blue-sky goals may have helped these young people solidify their identities as students.

Brophy is testing versions of the self-authoring curriculum at two high schools in Rotterdam, and monitoring their psychological well-being, school attendance and tendency to procrastinate.

Early results are promising, she says: "It helps students understand what they really want to do."

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit www.npr.org

You can also read this article online at NPR.

Saturday, August 29, 2015

1A: David Sedaris (b. December 26, 1956)




Where to get more information about David Sedaris?  Go to his website. See his page at The New Yorker.  Read some articles about him at The New York Times. Listen or read highlights of his appearance on NPR. The Washington Post has a good page on him--in print and animation.

Sedaris talks about his sister's suicide in an interview with Vice. He also wrote about her in "Now We Are Five" for The New Yorker.

Hear Sedaris read his story "A Plague of Ticks" on This American Life. Yes, it is the same essay we are reading in 50 Essays.

What does David Sedaris look like?  See above.  What does David Sedaris sound like?  See below.

Click on this this link to watch the Closed Caption (CC) version of
Sedaris, above, appearing on David Letterman's "Late Show."



Watch his interview with Jon Stewart. With Closed Caption (CC)

David Sedaris has been in the news.  His books are bestsellers.  But are his stories true or works of fiction? Does it matter? Read this article, "As Sedaris walks line between real and ‘realish,’ NPR is left in the middle", that appeared in The Washington Post, May 13, 2012, that examines that issue.

Now that you have watched the video (and possibly others, as well) and read (and maybe listened to his reading of "A Plague of Ticks,") post an answer to one the following set of questions in the comments section:  If you met David Sedaris, what would you like to ask him, and what do you think his answer would be?

You may want to read former English 1A student Omri Avraham's field report, a terrific piece of writing, about her meet and greet with David Sedaris.  You'll find it below on this page.


1A: Omri "Irmo" Avraham: David Sedaris Field Report



(A field report from English 1A student Omri "Irmo" Avraham of David Sedaris's appearance at Vroman's Books, Pasadena, CA. Originally filed  December 1, 2010, 4:42 PM.  Because of the high value of Omri's post, her report is reposted here.  Comments by Omri's loyal audience are encouraged.  Let's turn, now, to Omri's report from Vroman's Books.)

Mr. Sedaris is quite the charming and adorable man, with a pink collared shirt, and polka dot tie. I spotted him at Vroman's sitting at a small wooden table for the pre-signing, actively engaged in a conversation with one of the many fans who were standing in line, now snaked through the bookstore.

I headed upstairs to get my pre-ordered copy of Squirrel Seeks Chipmunk. Although I purchased my book a mere three days after the event was announced, my ticket was only valid for a signing, and not a seat for the reading. Instead, me and about 50 other people were sprawled on the floor at Vroman's listening to Mr. Sedaris read over a speaker system. He sounded...cute. I just wanted to put him in a little box and take him home with me and have him be my own personal narrator and life-story teller, like in that movie, Stranger than Fiction.

He began by reading the title story out of his new book. All the characters in these stories are animals acting as humans; he did this because it turns a boring, simple, daily scenario into something a lot more interesting. A squirrel and a chipmunk conversing can provide hours of entertainment while a man and a women gets...boring. Additionally, he does not need to come up with names for his characters or lengthy descriptions because everyone can clearly picture a duck or a cat in their mind's eye.

He then read an excerpt from a story not included (upon his editor's suggestion) in this book because it was “disgusting.” The story, which of course I cannot remember the title of, was about flies eating vomit and fecal matter while having a legitimate conversation that one would have over dinner. And because it is expected for flies to engage in this sort of poop-eating behavior, Sedaris is not disturbed by his detailed, vivid, and at times gruesome yet hilarious descriptions of human waste.

On this book tour of his, he is collecting jokes from his fans. So after reading some random ones which he collected, and throwing in a few of his own, we were invited to wait around Vroman's for the actual signing.

8, 9, 10pm. Finally, at around 10:30 my group was called upstairs to the signing area. Why would a signing take so long, might you ask? Well, Mr. Sedaris was giving each fan his undivided attention, listening to jokes for his collection, and personalizing each autograph. His remark about my name? “Wow, this is the second name I have seen tonight that looks like a typo! I mean, you can rearrange the letters in almost any way and it would be just as legitimate!” Apparently he has not read The Indian in the Cupboard, but thank you Mr. Sedaris, I appreciate it.

I did not have a joke for him, but I asked him a question instead. Something slightly personal, yet not taboo. What is your favorite comfort food, or something you can eat without ever getting sick of? His answer...noodles with butter (and maybe salt/good cheese). and his favorite ice cream flavor? Clotted cream from a small parlor in London.

So what is your favorite food?

Mine you ask...probably peanut butter and jelly.