Richard Jewell College Teaching, Meditation, Creative Writing
Richard Jewell College Teaching and Learning
The Phenomena of Critical Thinking, Heuristics, and Metacognition in Composition |
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Writing
Critically, Metacognitively, and Heuristically
Have you been interested in using "critical thinking" in teaching and learning but don't want to study pedagogies about it from the movement of that name? The works here offer a complete transformation of critical-thinking pedagogy, providing FYW and advanced-composition teaching methods that not only are easy to adopt in the classroom but also are native to the ecologies of most composition courses. These adapted methods reveal to students how to establish a real writing self, control higher-order thinking to accomplish their writing goals in other disciplines, and utilize a "toolbox" of heuristic, metacognitive writing skills. They are useful, even necessary tools, with or without AI. The works on this page also provide hundreds of references to popular 1900-2000 writing pedagogies and their authors who already have inspired important elements of critical thinking, in the past century's birth of a writing discipline with its own theories and studies.
What is "Writing Consciousness"? It is your consciousness of being a writer. It also is is your active state of consciously transforming memories and impressions into written words. A third meaning is that you literally "write consciousness"--you create or build your own additional awareness--by building it through writing, constructing new meanings and new, strategic superstructures of writing. These three dispositions, over time, form your writerly persona. You can help all of your students develop their own. And doing so aids all of them in transferring these knowledge states to other courses and future situations in life.
This may sound complex in classroom application. I thought so at first. My own struggle to create a simple process is documented in the first few papers. I gradually learned how such teaching can be simple yet rich and powerful--and how very rewarding and useful students find it.
Below are links for
downloading an essay collection and, separately, six handouts
for applying critical thinking.
Most of the papers collected in the book have been
published or presented at conferences. The brief handouts,
most of which are one page, are for students and faculty
to use in developing writerly self-reflection
and metacognitive knowledge. Four of the six handouts
also demonstrate the deep research behind the
formulation of the stages of
the college writer and critical thinking. Of
these six, the first is the most important for
general students; the second, for faculty and
advanced/graduate students. The fifth handout is
particularly helpful for beginning or basic
college writers.
HANDOUTS for Classroom Use
THE THREE STAGES OF A COLLEGE WRITER (and sub-stages):
Handout A: The Three Stages of a College Writer—Grade Levels
(For all students, week 2 or 3 of term)Handout B: Stages, Competencies, or Discursive Practices of a College Writer
(For faculty use with “The Three Stages” above; for advanced students during the middle or end of term)Handout C: Stages of College Writing in Carroll and in Bloom and Bartholomae
(For faculty use with “the Three Stages” above”; for advanced students during the middle or end of term)Handout D: Thinking Self-Assessment for Reading and Writing in Three Parts
(For all students to use with “The Three Stages” above, beginning, middle, and/or end of term)OTHER HANDOUTS FOR STUDENTS
Handout E: Stories of Becoming a Writer: How I Learned to Write
(Introductory. For all students, especially those in FYW, beginning of term)Handout F: Identifying Bloom’s Thinking Skills in Your Paper
(Intermediate/advanced. For all students, middle/end of term)
ESSAY COLLECTION
Writing
Consciousness:
The Phenomena of
Critical Thinking, Heuristics, and Metacognition
in Composition
(downloadable pdf)
Introduction: The Fire of Reflective Thinking
Chapter 1. “Too Much Thinking!” What Should be Required?
Chapter 2. Using Role Playing to Teach Critical Thinking
Chapter 3. A Toolbox: Heuristics as Devices That Construct Thinking
Chapter 4. The Metacognitive Writer in the Experiential Classroom
Chapter 5. New Cartesian Writing: The Phenomenology of Composing
Chapter 6. Death and Rebirth: A Phenomenology of Style
Chapter 7. Raw Writing: A Phenomenal Critique of Process
and Post-Process Paradigms
Appendix: Six Handouts for Students and Instructors
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Richard Jewell has worked with metacognitive and critical thinking since his studies of metaphysics,
existentialism, and
phenomenology for his B.A. with honors in philosophy, and his M.A. in Theology
with a book-length thesis on experiential existentialism. He has published
and presented several works nationally on critical thinking. He also has
deeply researched Hindu and Western meditation methods
similar to Husserl's phenomenology of the self.
He applied these practices in his college and university classrooms during thirty-six years of teaching lower- and upper-division composition and writing in specific disciplines. His lessons and handouts for students always have included a variety of reflective critical-thinking and metacognitive practices that helped them develop their writer identities and heuristic toolboxes.
Richard retired in 2019 as a professor in the English and Humanities Departments of Inver Hills College, part of the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system. He taught as a full-time composition specialist for five years beforehand in the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities Composition Program. During that time, he specialized in publishing and presenting on English adjunct issues; he and Chris Anson of UMN-TC (now North Carolina State University) wrote the first chapter of the NCTE's 2002 Best Book winner Moving a Mountain. In 2007, Richard co-founded, with UMN-TC's Donald Ross, the Minnesota Writing and English (MnWE.org) annual college and university conference. He continues as its General Coordinator.
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Most recent page revision: May 2023
Top photo: Richard as a professor,
© Peggy Sorrell
Home page: http://richardjewell.org (also http://richard.jewell.net or http://richardjewell.net). You may find this page by Googling "richard jewell meditation" or "richard jewell college teaching." Questions? Email richard at jewell dot net (change "at" to "@" and "dot" to a period). Copyrights: All text and images in this website are © (copyright) by Richard Jewell except as noted. Texts and images of others in this website are copyrighted by their owners and are shown here by permission. Permissions: You have permission to read, share, and download anything in this website for your or others' educational use if the copyright notice is shown as "© Richard Jewell" or "Copyright Richard Jewell." This includes free use of the textbooks for teaching. However, if you or someone else will make a profit, you must receive permission first. Picture on right © 1996 by Alice Peterson |
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Body Meditation, Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, Meditationary Dictionary, 5thGospel.org
COLLEGE E-TEXTBOOKS, SCHOLARLY WORKS
Short Stories, Creative Nonfiction, Poems, Novels
ACTIVITIES, ABOUT
ACTIVITIES: MnWE--Minnesota Writing & English, Inver Hills College Course Syllabi
ABOUT: Description, and Resume/Vita
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