Listening, Reading, Discussing, and Writing in Composition Workshops extends
“How May We Help Students Write More Coherent Texts?” presented at CCCC, 1988, St.
Louis, Missouri. Written for an audience of teachers, parents,
and individuals interested in development of language abilities, it contains
ways for linking composition theory to persuasion and argumentation. The author accentuates roles for listeners,
independent readers, and discussers by honing in on differences between writing
workshops and composition workshops.
Grounded in expectations for performance, chapter one, “Paradigms,
Expectations, and Roles for Composition Workshops,” defines persuasion,
argumentation, fluency, clarity, and accuracy as embraced in composition
workshops. “Implementing Paradigms,
Expectations, and Roles,” describes four phases of composition workshops and
explains how they work together to influence quality of writing
performance. Chapter three offers
suggestions for making authentic performance assessments. The end of each chapter is devoted to
listening principles of performance related to that chapter. Diagrammatic charts are included to
facilitate understanding of functional relationships among process
paradigms. Emphasis is on practicing
listening, independent reading, and discussing which should generate
possibilities for discerning ideas for individual topics. This facilitates thinking required for
integrating information from several areas of study into content of essays.