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The writing teacher: Rethinking assessment and transformative learning in the creative writing classroom
Journal article   Peer reviewed

The writing teacher: Rethinking assessment and transformative learning in the creative writing classroom

K. Price
New Writing, Vol.17(4), pp.463-470
2020
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Abstract

In this paper, the writing teacher is a teacher who writes and thinks of writing in a verbal sense, as a performance and not the object that is the written. The paper explores differences between writing as a rhetorical function and writing as an act of creativity, questioning pedagogical practices and assessment of student work based on literary models that is common in educational structures. It seeks to explore a different way of thinking about writing as subject, and therefore writers as students and teachers, and the modes upon which we assess students’ performances as writers and the opportunities of transformative learning that it presents. Exploring an example of assessment and suggesting a way in which assessment for creative writing might be redirected to how we write rather than what we write, it concludes with a recommendation to rethink how we teach and assess creative writing, especially in high schools, but also in undergraduate programs, by refocusing the current emphasis on literary practices towards creative and thinking practices with the goal of producing transformative learning experiences students can use to expand their understanding of how to engage with the practice of writing.

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#4 Quality Education

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