Tuesday, January 21, 2020
Drudging Through Academia: Four Articles :: essays research papers fc
à à à à à Reading the four assigned articles, to me, was equivalent to the ââ¬Å"Readingâ⬠section of the ACT. Both seem to drag on for what seems like hours and require much re-reading to comprehend the complete message trying to be conveyed. My point is not that these articles are not worth reading. They contain valuable information about a very tough objective in academia today: writing. More directly, their focus seems to be the different methods available to help improve the writing of the up-and-coming writers of today. The only question I pose is whether all of the points presented in these articles pertain to the every day academy. The common point of the articles is clear: they house the authorsââ¬â¢ theories for bettering the work of young writers. à à à à à The authors of these articles use very persuasive points throughout their individual articles to install their belief in these ââ¬Å"keyâ⬠elements. Especially evident in the article, ââ¬Å"Inventing the Universityâ⬠, by David Bartholomae, was an arrogant tone toward the ââ¬Å"basic writersâ⬠of todayââ¬â¢s society. He repeatedly refers to the fact that these ââ¬Å"basic writersâ⬠are shut out or do not comprehend the ââ¬Å"privileged languageâ⬠of the elite group (139). This leads me to believe that the ââ¬Å"basic writersâ⬠are unfairly judged simply based on their lack of experience. Being one of these so-called ââ¬Å"basic writers,â⬠I do not especially like my writing being degraded simply because I have a smaller interest in every minuscule detail of academic writing. In ââ¬Å"Building a Mystery: Alternative Research Writing and the Academic Act of Seeking,â⬠by Robert Davis and Mark Shadle, the authors do s omething similar. They bring up the point that most emphasis is put on the research paper while little is put on other projects such as a cultural research project. Such a project would cause the student ââ¬Å"to explore topics of interest and fascination and use a variety of sources to inform projects that combine multiple genres and, in some cases, different media, disciplines, and cultures.â⬠(Davis 431). Also, they assume that nearly all inexperienced writers rely on a type of ââ¬Å"recipeâ⬠for research papers and other projects. One could say that this assumption is true since most college students write papers that are cut-and-dry research papers, following exact guidelines set by their instructors. Yet little credit is given to the creativity of these writers, even though it may (and most likely does) exist.
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