Program Learning Objectives

Program Learning Objectives (PLOs) for First-Year Writing

The following eight program learning objectives (PLOs) are a result of a collaborative effort of a group of founding IWS faculty who worked diligently on issues of assessment during the 2006-2007 and 2007-2008 academic calendars.  These PLOs represent both a commitment to faculty authorship of the first-year writing (FYW) program as well as a desire to have a larger, cohesive vision.  Because we are all officially teaching the same course, we must provide a collective philosophic approach and praxis for our students’ writing.  The PLOs are, thus, used a lens for how IWS defines FYW and communicates to outside audiences. 

The eight objectives that are printed in boldface are the original articulations from the founding writers and should appear on all FYW syllabi.  The indented prose was written by faculty as a student-friendly discourse at the fall 2008 orientation and appear on the IWS website (faculty can chose to copy these passages onto syllabi or not since this is available at the website).   These eight PLOs are not meant to simply be cut and pasted onto existing syllabi templates but, instead, should be seen as way for us to communicate an overarching philosophy that we each represent as part of our membership in IWS. 

In addition to the eight objectives that are printed in boldface, faculty should communicate how each PLO is realized in the course of the semester. The eight bold-faced PLOs should be on each syllabus and a short statement or bullet that explains each PLO should also be provided in the context of the syllabus’s goals.

These are our PLOs:

After taking first year writing, students will be able to:

1. Recognize that writing is a mode of communication and a social activity, a matter of negotiating the expectations of different audiences and rhetorical conventions of different genres.

Writers achieve their purposes more successfully when they consider the needs and expectations of their audiences. Writing has a long history. We often choose to use the conventions of pre-existing forms, called genres, that have arisen during this history. Knowing the conventions of these genres lets writers either accept or reject them based on what they are trying to achieve.

2. Know that writing is a recursive process.

Writing is a complex process that involves a great deal of thinking, drafting, reconstructing, rethinking, and revising. Revision isn’t simply top-down, but often requires the radical reworking of our drafts. For the sake of convenience, we speak of pre-writing (preparation), “writing”, and “revising”. However, it is important to realize that these stages intermingle, that when we are pre-writing, we are also writing and revising; when we are writing, we are also pre-writing and revising; and when we are revising, we are also pre-writing and writing.

3. Make inferences, take mental risks, and develop complex ideas through abstract and critical thinking, reading, and writing.

Writers understand that the language they use to express themselves shapes what they know and how they know. How does the language we use shape our reality? What does it mean to use our own voices? To take mental risks in our writing means to push the boundaries of what we know. It is to move out of our comfort zone so that we can find deeper meaning in our experience of the world.

4. Analyze and produce texts from a variety of contexts and media.

Writers are influenced by a variety of oral, written, and visual media (pictures, photographs, and multimodal texts like blogs, webpages, or social networks sites). We explain connections or ideas across the variety of such texts and understand how those connections can lead us to more complex and multiple points of view. We integrate varied modes of communication and expression to enhance and transform the meaning of our work.

5. Use the basic elements of effective arguments (claims, defining terms, evidence, counter-arguments) and demonstrate how logical fallacies can undermine positions.

Writers do not simply accept propositions as valid, we critically evaluate them. We listen respectfully and critically to other people's ideas in order to examine our own and others' positions carefully. We state our thoughts clearly, accurately, and honestly when we make claims in our work and we support those claims.

6. When conducting research, summarize complex readings and ideas gathered succinctly in order to show audiences that they understand the context of such source material and are working to place themselves in conversation with those other perspectives.

All research arises out of the need for writers to answer questions. Research requires that we think about the questions we have and use reading and writing in an attempt to answer these questions. Since our questions are large and complex, we may not find “simple” answers. That is, the result of our research is not to find THE answer but to acknowledge and engage audience(s) in an attempt to discuss the complexities of a given issue.

7. Understand the need to negotiate, analyze and problem-solve technological interfaces for a variety of disciplinary, rhetorical, and writing needs.

Writers acquire information and present concepts in many ways: we compose at computer screens, using word processing for print and varied formatting conventions; we participate in online discussions; we create compositions with presentation software; we also create and view webpages, digital portfolios, audio and video files. As writers, we use these digital technologies to create new genres and solve problems common to our academic, professional, civic, and/or personal lives.

8. Expand and experiment with writing style through variation of rhythm, syntax, sentence length, punctuation, and vocabulary.

Writers explore their relationships to language (rhyme, emotion, habits, and meaning) in order to develop a distinct writing style. Through close reading of scholarly and lyrical texts, we strategize ways to bridge our own specific speech communities and the demands of academic writing.

Last faculty revision: August 22, 2008

For comments and questions, please contact the director of First-Year Writing, Dr. Carmen Kynard, at kynardc@stjohns.edu