Chapter 5: On a topic
of your own choosing and with a clear position of your own, use at least seven
unbiased, accurate, and authoritative sources to write a balanced and objective
paper that gives a complete picture of the subject you are investigating.
The title of this chapter reveals McCormick’s underlying
premise in Chapter 5—the ridiculously flawed nature of the FYC “research paper” assignment, its inherent
contradictions and adherence to objectivist/cognitivist theory and deference to
dominant views.
The research paper, as assigned in most textbooks, is a
contradiction because while it tells students to “think independently and
evaluatively,” the way the assignments asks students to read in fact prevents
students from thinking or writing critically. The directions are
mechanical: how to take notes, find
sources, use a card catalogue and online databases, how to outline, quote and
document sources. Such skills, while useful, are purely “functional rather than
contextual” (133).
McCormick finds that such research paper assignments are
linked to residual practices and beliefs (133)—namely the objectivist’s view of
knowable facts and correct readings and answers. There are some texts,
according to McCormick, that have picked up on expressivist practices, and
these will include discussion of the “biased nature” of sources, acknowledging
that individuals may come to different conclusions about the same topics and
events. Nonetheless, both approaches to the research project rely on students
reporting information and coming to the correct (dominant) answer to a problem.
As part of this discussion, McCormick points out that textbooks ask students to
determine whether their sources are objective or biased based on their
instinctive sense of the writer’s reliability. In other words, what is “valid”
is what “feels valid,” a claim that the student’s own ideology will guide him
or her to truth. (WTF, right?) Whether
objectivist or expressivist in its slant, the assignment tell students to favor
objectivism and avoid controversy.
McCormick proposes a wholly different approach to the
research paper: “Students…will become
able to analyse, intervene in and possibly change the systems of social
relations in which they find themselves only when they learn discursive practices
that enable them to interrogate the larger cultural, historical and political
effects of the texts they encounter daily” (137). A McCormick research paper
asks students to interrogate contradictions as the focus of their writing. She
gives an example of a course called “Reading Texts,” taught a Carnegie Mellon
in the late 80s/early 90s, in which students learn to read texts for their
larger cultural assumptions. Early assignments in this class include a response
paper that is followed up with an analysis of that response, requiring students
to draw conclusions about their “personal retoires” and to see themselves as
complex subjects drawn from specific ideologies and cultural viewpoints.
The research paper assignment can be found on pg 147 of the
text. It requires students to perform an active critique of the existing social
order. Students choose an American institution, current issue, or cultural myth
to interrogate. They are required to read six diverse essays on the topic and
analyse each viewpoint for its own assumptions and ideologies. Finally,
students should come to their own conclusion about the topic AND analyse how
those views are formed (what ideologies are at play in the student’s own
reading?). This final act of meta-awareness is particularly difficult for
students to perform. McCormick writes that successful papers, at the Freshman
level, were generally able to analyse source texts for their cultural
influences and biases but probably not their own assumptions. Still, the
assignment moves students away from the traditional, objective way of writing a
research paper, and students “made significant steps in recognizing the
ideological embeddedness of what they had previously thought” about writing
(149).
Hi Jenn,
ReplyDeleteI love that you point out the first controversial point McCormick makes about the typical research assignment and how "the way the assignments asks students to read in fact prevents students from thinking or writing critically."