When Remediation Does Not Provide the Remedy
I do hear this from time to time.
"The five paragraph theme should be
taught because it introduces structure to students."
Most recently, I heard it yesterday from a friend. He was bemoaning the complete absence of structure in his students’
writing. The joke here, the point that my friend missed, of course, is that these students who don't know how to structure their writing have all been taught the five paragraph
theme.
My friend’s answer to this dilemma? "Teach the five
paragraph theme more. It's about structure."
"Do you mean that they haven’t gotten it yet?" I asked. "They've been taught the five paragraph theme, and they still don't get structure?"
This is how we approach students we believe are in need of
remediation. When we see the abundance of surface errors and the lack of a
clear thesis or even the lack of paragraphs in their writing, we think that they haven’t been
taught any of these aspects of writing
yet.
In most cases, they have.
What they haven’t been taught is how to structure their
thoughts for the current assignment. They know the structure of the five paragraph theme. And they know
that the current essay the teacher wants them to write in college will not fit
the five paragraph structure. So what do they do?
The answer is this. They try their best.
And it is our job to teach them new
structures.
What the Five
Paragraph Theme Teaches
Here’s what students learn from their lessons in the one essay format they've been taught to write. First, pick
three things to say about a topic. Those three things do not need to be
connected, and the writer won’t need to defend those three things to an audience that
doesn’t agree that these are three items to discuss.
In fact, what the writer is doing is merely stating facts that are evident
to most people already.
Next, students are taught to open with a generalization, not a specific
case. They are also taught to repeat at the end what they said in the
introduction and the body. In other words, they have been taught that their
audience is not very interested and lost track of what was said a paragraph
ago.
These three items add up to poor rhetoric. Imagine, though,
if we taught the five paragraph theme and then followed it up with a theme that
required writers to argue why the three things they have written about, say, HIV, are
the three things that are interconnected in some way.
Teach that and we have begun to teach thinking.
Teach that and we have begun to introduce students to
audiences that are thoughtful.
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