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Reason
Write Program
[College professors] expect
students to recognize that writing is a form of thinking and that
sustaining arguments and synthesizing ideas will be the mainstay of
their college writing experiences.
Academic
Literacy: A Statement of Competencies
Expected of Students Entering California's Public Colleges and
Universities
[Harvard's] philosophy is that
writing and thinking are inseparably related and that good thinking
requires good writing. You will spend most of your time in class on
strategies of argument--discovering and arranging persuasive ideas and
evidence through a process of drafting and revising.
Harvard
Expository Writing Program for Freshmen
Reason Write sets a
single goal for students: write a 1,000 word sustained argument, free
of mechanical error, by high school graduation. The program
is based on a simple premise – good writing is good thinking. By
focusing high school instruction on argumentative writing, students
develop the critical reading, writing and thinking skills that are
required in college and university courses. This four-year,
writing-across-the-curriculum program provides high school students
with coherent, consistent literacy instruction across all grade levels
and across all academic disciplines. The result – students graduate
from high school prepared to compete in higher education.
High schools help students
gain admission to college, but do not prepare students for college work.
Two-thirds of college freshmen are unprepared for the most frequently
assigned writing tasks: analyzing arguments or information and
synthesizing information from several sources. In fact, there is
minimal overlap between the types of writing tasks assigned in high
school and college. For this reason, writing instructors in the
University of California system most frequently teach argumentative
writing in introductory composition courses (Intersegmental Committee
of the Academic Senates of the California Community Colleges, the
California State University, and the University of California, 2002).
Writing ability is a
powerful predictor of college success. College professors
evaluate student learning, ability and potential through student
writing, asking students to complete approximately 30 writing
assignments per year. While test scores, GPA, and high school
coursework are strongly correlated with undergraduate academic
performance, writing proficiency is one of the best predictors of
college success (along with knowledge of advanced mathematics).
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