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Volume 26 • Number 2

Summer 2008



 

Teaching Composition in Twenty-First-Century America: A Conversation with Samuel Adler

By Marilyn Shrude

MS: I have a few questions for you. some of them are rather specific and some are open-ended enough that they will take us to different territories.
SA: Fine.
MS: First of all, do you use a particular methodology in teaching composition?
SA: I would say no—though I do when I teach a class, if there is such a thing. We used to have classes for nonmajors—I really liked to do that—and also classes for young kids. before I let them do what they want to do, we actually have exercises. I use the same exercises with my freshmen before I let them write anything. usually they come in having written a lot, but I just want them to be a little more conscious of the process. And so I do use a method, but only for the beginners in composition and also with beginning students in college. It seems to work well, because what we do for the first semester, at least, is to divide each lesson into two sections. The first is just exercises and the second is their own writing.


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