“我们不是一个‘修理店’”:写作中心是一个配置独特的学习空间

IF 0.4 Q4 LINGUISTICS
Puleng Sefalane-Nkohla, Thembinkosi Mtonjeni
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引用次数: 1

摘要

几十年来,写作中心的从业者一直在争论和抗议他们的教学空间的贬低特征。开普半岛科技大学(CPUT)的写作中心一直被认为是“诊所”、“实验室”、“修理店”和“消除学生作文缺陷的补救机构”(Archer和Parker 2016, Drennan 2017, Moore 1950, North 1984)。尽管写作中心的实践者和理论家将这些中心描述为培养和提高学生的智力和语言能力的中心,以便参与和掌握学科素养和体裁,同时促进教育项目的转型,但这种价值往往被CPUT的讲师和学生误解为专注于提高语法能力。本文旨在以科技大学为背景,探讨如何将写作中心重新定义为一个具有独特转型教学法的空间。在学术素养方法(Lea and Street, 1998)的支持下,本研究将我们的写作中心运作的机构空间视为“构成话语和权力的场所”。研究的目的是确定使用CPUT写作中心的学生是如何看待它的。采用混合方法,研究人员寻求以下两个问题的答案:(i) CPUT写作中心如何配置以支持科技大学的学习?以及(ii)学生如何形容中央理工大学写作中心是一个拥有独特教学法的学习空间?这篇文章报告了学生们对写作中心作为西开普省一所科技大学(CPUT)学习空间的看法和假设。它还研究了一个独特配置的学习空间的排列,其属性对话的影响,以及它被(错误地)视为一个变革机构的程度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“We are not a ‘fix-it shop’”: The writing centre as a uniquely configured learning space
For decades, writing centre practitioners have contested and protested against the demeaning characterisations of their pedagogic space. The Cape Peninsula University of Technology’s (CPUT) Writing Centre has endured stigmatisation as a “clinic”, “laboratory”, “fix-it shop”, and “remedial agency for removing students’ deficiencies in composition” (Archer and Parker 2016, Drennan 2017, Moore 1950, North 1984). Although writing centre practitioners and theorists have described these centres as hubs for nurturing and enhancing students’ intellectual and linguistic capacities in order to engage and master disciplinary literacies and genres while contributing to the transformation of educational projects, such a value tends to be misrecognised – by both lecturers and students at CPUT – as focusing on improving grammatical competence. This article contributes to the discourse of redefining the writing centre as a space with unique transformational pedagogies in the context of a university of technology, namely CPUT. Underpinned by the Academic Literacies approach (Lea and Street 1998), this study views the institutional spaces in which our writing centre operates as “constituted in, and as sites of discourse and power”. The research purpose is to determine how the CPUT Writing Centre is viewed by the students who make use of it. Employing a mixed-methods approach, the researchers sought answers to the following two questions: (i) How is the CPUT Writing Centre configured to support learning at a university of technology? and (ii) How do students characterise the CPUT Writing Centre as a learning space with its own unique pedagogy? The article reports on students’ perceptions and assumptions about the Writing Centre as a learning space at a university of technology in the Western Cape (CPUT). It also examines the permutations of a uniquely configured learning space, the impact of its attributive conversations, and the extent to which it is (mis)recognised as a transformative agency.
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CiteScore
0.60
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