Wednesday, October 31, 2012

A Change of Scenery

This post marks a different point in my education as a student of CogSci, Education and English. So please, take the posts before with a grain of salt, seeing as I departed highly from an academic tone which often we frown upon and I am afraid will stain my credibility. However, I no longer want to hide and deny the person and writer I once was. I am constantly evolving and believe in "emerging thinking," meaning that not all writing, speech or text needs to be perfectly polished. Instead, this is a safe place for me to think about my topics in a pattern of speech that makes sense to my audience, mostly me and my two outstanding directors whom I cannot thank enough!

I am working on my Senior Honors thesis concerning a study on Jane Austen and reading attention with the focus on English education.

I was asked why do I want to do this. I've been fumbling around for the right answer, and I'm starting to think it's many.


After a great semester with Dr. Phillips, I am really interesting in studying the brain. There is so much that we don't know about it, but I believe that the more we study and know it, the better we can manipulate it to do the things we want it to do.

I am highly invested in English Education. A running theme through my courses at MSU has been teaching has no formula because the classroom changes everyday due to external and internal factors. So I've been on a mini-quest to see how we as a collective teach. Are there running patterns throughout our American or even global classrooms? This search is problematic because ascribing a formula to teaching can make it into that which we do not want it to be: detached from students, teacher-centered and most of all...boring! In my study of CogSci, I want to look at how understanding the brain's functions can deepen, or improve, the classroom.

Looking back to high school junior year, I did my big research essay on how school is killing students. And you know what, I really think I was on to something. "Teaching with the Brain in Mind" by Eric Jensen makes a point to note that high schoolers have different sleep patterns than the current school system, thus we end up with sleepy teens in our class. I made this point in my research paper (though far less eloquently and with considerable more angst) and I still believe that today. If we start to integrate new knowledge into the schools, I really believe we can start to teach to students better.

There is also this linguistic divide that has always bugged me. How can teachers access new data coming out if the language is written not written for them but really is important to them? I will explore the challenges I face in writing for multiple audiences, as well as this whole formatting thing, which I believe is a frustrating social construction, but I have to deal with it. I want to be present in my writing because it does not try to hide the fact that I will inherently be biased no matter how hard I try, especially concerning new subject combinations that have less scholarly quotes to plop in.

This taboo divide between science, education and English is really no longer relevant in our highly connected society. Each subject can enhance the other. Humanities can humanize the sciences, sciences can qualify the humanities. The issue of these products is where our future lies. Above all, I believe in the promise of the future that comes from the hard work of today. I realize that my particular interest of study may stomp on some toes, but my study raises questions about each of these subject areas that may have never been raised before.

In the process of trying to answer these questions, we get a deluge of new questions. That space of delightful ignorance is where we grow and improve.

As of this moment, the thesis is: What questions for the English secondary classroom does this study of modes of reading attention in Jane Austen raise?
This thesis is strong because it focuses on questions, not answers.
This thesis is weak because it's not really specific and it just doesn't sit right with me.
I may have been taught this, but I mostly found it out myself after writing 20-30 papers at the collegiate level: write your paper first and then your thesis. For this project, the two instances may not be so distinct. Instead, I see it more as a simultaneous development; as one side evolves, so does the other.

Coming up soon: After reading the PhD student's essays, I want to talk about
1. Almost all noted things on needing to annotate text while reading; what does this mean for teaching reading strategies in the classroom?
2. How brainstorming affects essay
3. Why the researchers asked if the subjects had taught any course and what are the implications there
4. Essay content: lots of focus on Edmund/Fanny and education/intelligence

2 comments:

  1. Hi Paige,
    This is great, and I love this format for you.

    I also loved this quote: "This taboo divide between science, education and English is really no longer relevant in our highly connected society. Each subject can enhance the other. Humanities can humanize the sciences, sciences can qualify the humanities." You're already onto something deep and rich methodologically.

    I thought it was great how you were thinking about issues of translation. This seems like a deep and interesting question for you to be tackling as you organize your own work. How can your work help these communities talk to one another--in language that is both useful and rigorous? Also pragmatic? This seems like one of the core motivating issues. Also perhaps part of your evolving methodology...

    The idea of setting up an evolving thesis and set of questions seems perfect, at least to me, as does your attitude toward open-ended (non self-conscious) writing expressed here. This is a great method for many!

    I personally have found it helpful to go ahead and try to articulate that thesis early (as you did) even when it's rightly hazy. Then you can hit that point, like you did, where you think..."it's something like that, but not quite..." Then, as it evolves, your argument can evolve with it...and you can use these repeated articulations of that set of central claims and questions to help them (and your ideas) grow, while staying centered. You'll always keep rethinking and retooling--that's the point!

    I'd be curious what you might think of this idea: at the end of each post, what if you take a stab at one short sentence that brainstorms how this particular idea or section might fit within the larger project? (I gave you some pointers here by tagging language that made me think: "methodology!")

    Or, if you don't know, you can say "I'm not quite sure where or how this fits!" but add a line on what you might do to resolve that uncertainty, or where you'll go next. (i.e. if the note-taking seems crucial, to see if there's a quote on close reading and marking you might use, or a full article on note-taking and close reading in "Profession". I'm almost sure there will be!).

    If you get hooked on this note-taking angle, you might want to chat briefly with Austin, who's interested in the 18th C history of artificial memory systems & "extended mind" (particularly, ways that they believed technologies for note-taking, indexing, collecting quotes in commonplace books, handwriting, improved (or displaced) natural memory. Arguments over whether writing things down improved memory or hurt it go back to the classical period, so if you want to add a mini historical angle, there's plenty of material here that might be relevant to Jane Austen herself...

    best,
    NP

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  2. Almost forgot: 3. Why the researchers asked if the subjects had taught any course and what are the implications there

    I asked because it seemed important to know. I read differently when I'm writing an article and when I'm teaching. If I actually had singled out particular quotes for students to look at (as in Persuasion from 492H), or had given a lecture on a particular theme within that material, even if far in the past, it seems like I'd be primed & far more likely to focus on those--and remember-- them again in the essay. This result in the close-reading essay might have far more to do with my past personal experience than with the comparison we were trying to isolate in the experiment (i.e. an experimental confound) but interesting nonetheless!

    How many students mentioned teaching Mansfield Park, do you know?

    best,
    NP

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