Case Study -- Bri
For the purposes
of this case study I will refer to my student as Jane:
There are a couple of pedagogical
issues that recur during my appointments with Jane, mainly with her reading comprehension
and, therefore, her ability to interpret assignments. The problem, I think, is stemming from her reading
practice. When she brings a new assignment
to our session, we begin by reviewing the criteria. Working in the WC this semester has taught me
the importance of reading everything out loud.
Usually, I volunteer to read the instructions, but I think Jane may be interpreting
this gesture as a needed moment for me to orient myself inside the assignment,
and so will distract herself (maybe she feels awkward?) by looking around the room. To combat this tendency, I’ve stopped offering
to read for her and instead ask her to, and she does nervously. Jane reads fast, skips over words she doesn’t
know, and often mispronounces basic diction, such as “pacific” instead of “specific.” We’ve only had one online meeting so far and we
did review an assignment together. Since
it was our first meeting, I offered to read, honestly to save time (she had a
problem with her camera that ate up a lot of time). While I read, she was less
distracted, so possibly this problem will just take care of itself. However, this leads to the second challenge which
is interpreting assignments. For example,
during this week’s online meeting as we reviewed her essay assignment, it became
clear that the instructor was referencing specific criteria that had been covered
in lecture. When I asked Jane to
clarify, she said she was also confused.
Long story short, we spent a good chunk of tutoring time parsing out
what the instructor was asking for and eventually came to realize that Jane
needed to complete an additional step before she could begin outlining anything
for her paper.
Jane is from a small town in Iowa,
where her parents own and operate a family restaurant. Jane’s family is Muslim, though Jane herself
does not wear a traditional hijab, and so looks like a 19-year-old Caucasian female. English is her first language, not Arabic. Most of her social interactions seem to be
with her family; she talks about them quite a bit, and her dad has even called during
our sessions a few times. Her brothers
and sisters all work at the restaurant, and when Jane goes home on the weekends
to visit often part of the motivation is to do bookwork for the family restaurant. She was living in the dorms and seems to have
also developed a close relationship with her dorm-mate. Jane attended public school, and so her writing
is informed from a basic high school education that teaches the five-paragraph
essay formula. Her motivation for
enrolling in the WC program is to improve her writing skills.
The positive thing about being
exposed to a five-paragraph essay formula is that Jane understands that effective
essays develop in stages. Jane is always
willing to brainstorm a topic and she is an excellent brainstormer. Similarly, she appreciates the nuanced
benefits to outlining. She understands the function of a thesis, but
struggles to make them specific. Often
her intro paragraph suffers from the same problem, using only broad and generalized
language. While Jane does appreciate the
steps in drafting an essay, she thinks too linearly about the paper writing
process itself and struggles with initially skipping the intro paragraph and
moving on to the body.
We all know that having a strong
reading practice directly impacts our writing. How do I politely and
conscientiously correct Jane when she is reading too fast, skipping words she
doesn’t know (because she knows I can see them), and mispronouncing words when
she seems to be reading quickly because she is self-conscious about not knowing? Any feedback regarding this issue or any
other suggestions for things I’ve mentioned is welcomed. Thank you for taking the time to wrap your
head around these pedagogical questions with me!
Hi Bri,
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your experience. About your question, I do have to do this most of the times because my students have read out loud in a foreign language, and I do have to correct them when the skip words or read too fast (because they just want to get it done). I usually stop them because I can tell when they feel nervous, and I tell them to take a breath and try to calm them down. Once they feel more comfortable, they usually slow down in their reading and I am able to provide them with more feedback. This could be challenging though, because there isn't much time, so I sometimes have to limit my corrections.
Bri and Bethany--It's even more challenging because Jane isn't reading what to her is a foreign language like Bethany's students are, so there's probably some shame involved since she may very well be English dominant vs. Arabic dominant. Maybe, Bri, for the next assignment or for an essay she has to read (she'd have to paste it in or import the file), suggest something like, "Since the paper is not due right away, let's use some of our time to recognize and pronounce unfamiliar words and find out what they mean." You could tell her outright what some words mean and she can write down the meaning. You could have her use dictionary.com to find the meanings and pronunciation of the others. Does she use the same skip-over strategy when she reads her own writing and thus miss places that need editing? I'm guessing probably not because she wouldn't use words she didn't know in her own writing.
ReplyDeleteHi Bri,
ReplyDeleteI agree and concur with the suggestions above, and will add that your role in her educational life is one of the few places where Jane can be safely encouraged, corrected, advised on these sorts of hiccups without there being any penalty or judgement. I think the hardest part of this hurdle is that is puts the brunt of the weight on you to take on a more taxing position of stepping out and suggesting some corrections that may feel awkward or offensive in other contexts. But in this context there is incredible help and growth that can happen. Great job already with all you are doing, Jane is lucky to have you as a tutor!
Bri,
ReplyDeleteYour writing shows how compassionate you are towards your student--it sounds like she trusts you and will listen. Would it be useful to treat reading as close reading? It's skill-building as a process, and you can model for her with some example. She could even do a free write and then break it down sentence by sentence. Visuals may help here--you can circle sections/words on the page, making it clear what each part contributes to the whole, showing how skipping words can fundamentally change the meaning of the sentence. I think treating the skipping the words issue that she may not be sure how to handle as more a detective process where she gets to refer to the internet and annotate a page could be a way of making it hands-on.