http://www.ilstu.edu/~ddhesse/wpa/positions/outcomes.htm
WPA Outcomes
Statement for First-Year Composition
Adopted by
the Council of Writing Program Administrators (WPA), April 2000
A version
of this statement was published in
WPA: Writing
Program Administration 23.1/2 (fall/winter 1999): 59-66
Introduction
This statement
describes the common knowledge, skills, and attitudes sought by first-year
composition programs in American postsecondary education. To some extent,
we seek to regularize what can be expected to be taught in first-year composition;
to this end the document is not merely a compilation or summary of what
currently takes place. Rather, the following statement articulates what
composition teachers nationwide have learned from practice, research, and
theory. This document intentionally defines only "outcomes," or types of
results, and not "standards," or precise levels of achievement. The setting
of standards should be left to specific institutions or specific groups
of institutions.
Learning to
write is a complex process, both individual and social, that takes place
over time with continued practice and informed guidance. Therefore, it
is important that teachers, administrators, and a concerned public do not
imagine that these outcomes can be taught in reduced or simple ways. Helping
students demonstrate these outcomes requires expert understanding of how
students actually learn to write. For this reason we expect the primary
audience for this document to be well-prepared college writing teachers
and college writing program administrators. In some places, we have chosen
to write in their professional language. Among such readers, terms such
as "rhetorical" and "genre" convey a rich meaning that is not easily simplified.
While we have also aimed at writing a document that the general public
can understand, in limited cases we have aimed first at communicating effectively
with expert writing teachers and writing program administrators.
These statements
describe only what we expect to find at the end of first-year composition,
at most schools a required general education course or sequence of courses.
As writers move beyond first-year composition, their writing abilities
do not merely improve. Rather, students' abilities not only diversify along
disciplinary and professional lines but also move into whole new levels
where expected outcomes expand, multiply, and diverge. For this reason,
each statement of outcomes for first-year composition is followed by suggestions
for further work that builds on these outcomes.
Rhetorical
Knowledge
By the end
of first year composition, students should
-
Focus on a purpose
-
Respond to the
needs of different audiences
-
Respond appropriately
to different kinds of rhetorical situations
-
Use conventions
of format and structure appropriate to the rhetorical situation
-
Adopt appropriate
voice, tone, and level of formality
-
Understand how
genres shape reading and writing
-
Write in several
genres
Faculty in all
programs and departments can build on this preparation by helping students
learn
-
The main features
of writing in their fields
-
The main uses
of writing in their fields
-
The expectations
of readers in their fields
Critical Thinking,
Reading, and Writing
By the end
of first year composition, students should
-
Use writing and
reading for inquiry, learning, thinking, and communicating
-
Understand a writing
assignment as a series of tasks, including finding, evaluating, analyzing,
and synthesizing appropriate primary and secondary sources
-
Integrate their
own ideas with those of others
-
Understand the
relationships among language, knowledge, and power
Faculty in all
programs and departments can build on this preparation by helping students
learn
-
The uses of writing
as a critical thinking method
-
The interactions
among critical thinking, critical reading, and writing
-
The relationships
among language, knowledge, and power in their fields
Processes
By the end
of first year composition, students should
-
Be aware that
it usually takes multiple drafts to create and complete a successful text
-
Develop flexible
strategies for generating, revising, editing, and proof-reading
-
Understand writing
as an open process that permits writers to use later invention and re-thinking
to revise their work
-
Understand the
collaborative and social aspects of writing processes
-
Learn to critique
their own and others' works
-
Learn to balance
the advantages of relying on others with the responsibility of doing their
part
-
Use a variety
of technologies to address a range of audiences
Faculty in all
programs and departments can build on this preparation by helping students
learn
-
To build final
results in stages
-
To review work-in-progress
in collaborative peer groups for purposes other than editing
-
To save extensive
editing for later parts of the writing process
-
To apply the technologies
commonly used to research and communicate within their fields
Knowledge of
Conventions
By the end
of first year composition, students should
-
Learn common formats
for different kinds of texts
-
Develop knowledge
of genre conventions ranging from structure and paragraphing to tone and
mechanics
-
Practice appropriate
means of documenting their work
-
Control such surface
features as syntax, grammar, punctuation, and spelling.
Faculty in all
programs and departments can build on this preparation by helping students
learn
-
The conventions
of usage, specialized vocabulary, format, and documentation in their fields
-
Strategies through
which better control of conventions can be achieved