WPA OUTCOMES STATEMENT FOR FIRST-YEAR COMPOSITION
Revised for Publication in WPA Journal
This statement describes the
common knowledge, skills, and attitudes sought by first-year composition
programs in American postsecondary education. To some extent, we seek to
regularize what can be expected to be taught in first-year composition; to this
end the document is not merely a compilation or summary of what currently takes
place. Rather, the following statement articulates what composition teachers
nationwide have learned from practice, research, and theory. This document
intentionally defines only "outcomes," or types of results, and not
"standards," or precise levels of achievement. The setting of
standards should be left to specific institutions or specific groups of
institutions.
Learning to write
is a complex process, both individual and social, that takes place over time
with continued practice and informed guidance. Therefore, it is important that
teachers, administrators, and a concerned public do not imagine that these
outcomes can be taught in reduced or simple ways. Helping students demonstrate
these outcomes requires expert understanding of how students actually learn to
write. For this reason we expect the primary audience for this document to be
well-prepared college writing teachers and college writing program
administrators. In some places, we have chosen to write in their professional
language. Among such readers, terms such as "rhetorical" and
"genre" convey a rich meaning that is not easily simplified. While we
have also aimed at writing a document that the general public can understand,
in limited cases we have aimed first at communicating effectively with expert
writing teachers and writing program administrators.
These statements
describe only what we expect to find at the end of first-year composition, at
most schools a required general education course or sequence of courses. As
writers move beyond first-year composition, their writing abilities do not
merely improve. Rather, students' abilities not only diversify along
disciplinary and professional lines but also move into whole new levels where
expected outcomes expand, multiply, and diverge. For this reason, each
statement of outcomes for first-year composition is followed by suggestions for
further work that builds on these outcomes.
By the end of first year
composition, students should
Faculty in all programs and
departments can build on this preparation by helping students learn
By the end of first year
composition, students should
Faculty in all programs and
departments can build on this preparation by helping students learn
By the end of first year
composition, students should
Faculty in all programs and
departments can build on this preparation by helping students learn
By the end of first year
composition, students should
Faculty in all programs and
departments can build on this preparation by helping students learn