Helping with Rhetoric and Poli Sci
Since I haven’t
taught Rhetoric, I am helping almost all of my enrollment students with work in
areas that are not within my discipline (I also tutor a Political Science major
with work in his field). As described in chapter five of the Bedford Guide, I find myself helping
them a lot with process. With my Rhetoric and Poli Sci students, we’ve spent
sessions working on research techniques (What is JSTOR and how do you use it?), pre-writing activities
(brainstorming and outlining), and grammatical/syntactic deep dives (How to
know when to use a semi-colon or comma).
One of my
students is a Creative Writing major working on their fantasy novel which
features a dense, complicated mythology and an invented language system. We
began our work on it together with the third-to-last chapter. In a way, this
text proved perhaps even more foreign than the Rhetoric or Poli Sci essays, and
we even took one 25-minute session so they could outline for me all the major
pieces of character, plot, and world-building information I would need to know
to navigate the final sections of the text. However, it’s still filled with
names and information I don’t understand. So, I instead focus on how each
chapter works structurally and how individual scenes come together, along with
syntactic/grammatical issues. This has helped me better think through how I’m
aiding the other students as well who are dealing with content I am not
immediately familiar with. And even when tutoring students in unfamiliar fields,
I usually feel confident that I can at least help them locate areas in their
work in which they are not specific or analytical enough.
"And even when tutoring students in unfamiliar fields, I usually feel confident that I can at least help them locate areas in their work in which they are not specific or analytical enough." I agree with this, and default to it frequently. Writing shares some commonalities no matter what is being said about what kind of content. Well put, Kyle!
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