“Helping Me Learn New Things Every Day”: The Power of Community College Students’ Writing Across Genres

IF 1.9 1区 文学 Q2 COMMUNICATION Written Communication Pub Date : 2020-10-16 DOI:10.1177/0741088320964766
Tanzina Ahmed
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Although community colleges are important entry points into higher education for many American students, few studies have investigated how community college students engage with different genres or develop genre knowledge. Even fewer have connected students’ genre knowledge to their academic performance. The present article discusses how 104 ethnically, culturally, and linguistically diverse students reported on classroom genre experiences and wrote stories about college across three narrative genres (Letter, Best Experience, Worst Experience). Findings suggest that students’ engagement with classroom genres in community college helped them develop rhetorical reading and writing skills. When students wrote about their college lives across narrative genres, they reflected on higher education in varied ways to achieve differing sociocultural goals with distinct audiences. Finally, students’ experience with classroom and narrative genres predicted their GPA, implying that students’ genre knowledge signals and influences their academic success. These findings demonstrate how diverse students attending community college can use genres as resources to further their social and academic development.
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“每天帮我学新东西”:社区大学生跨体魄写作的力量
虽然社区大学是许多美国学生进入高等教育的重要切入点,但很少有研究调查社区大学学生如何参与不同类型或发展类型知识。甚至很少有人将学生的体裁知识与他们的学习成绩联系起来。本文讨论了104名种族、文化和语言不同的学生如何报告课堂类型体验,并以三种叙事类型(信件、最佳体验、最差体验)撰写关于大学的故事。研究结果表明,学生在社区大学参与课堂体裁有助于他们发展修辞阅读和写作技能。当学生们用不同的叙事体裁来描写他们的大学生活时,他们用不同的方式来反思高等教育,以达到不同的社会文化目标,受众也不同。最后,学生对课堂体裁和叙事体裁的体验预测了他们的GPA,这意味着学生的体裁知识标志并影响着他们的学业成功。这些发现表明,就读社区大学的不同学生可以利用流派作为资源,进一步促进他们的社会和学术发展。
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来源期刊
Written Communication
Written Communication COMMUNICATION-
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
15.80%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: Written Communication is an international multidisciplinary journal that publishes theory and research in writing from fields including anthropology, English, education, history, journalism, linguistics, psychology, and rhetoric. Among topics of interest are the nature of writing ability; the assessment of writing; the impact of technology on writing (and the impact of writing on technology); the social and political consequences of writing and writing instruction; nonacademic writing; literacy (including workplace and emergent literacy and the effects of classroom processes on literacy development); the social construction of knowledge; the nature of writing in disciplinary and professional domains.
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