George Otte

Basic Writing


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the minority and the majority” (291). Yet the next decade—in fact, the next quarter century—did not see the closing of these gaps. The Reagan years instead saw the coinage of the term “permanent underclass”; with that came a sense that the so-called “underprepared,” like the poor, would always be with us. In that light, what Shaughnessy went on to say seems still more important:

      Colleges must be prepared to make more than a graceless and begrudging accommodation to this unpreparedness, opening their doors with one hand and then leading students into an endless corridor of remedial anterooms with the other. We already begin to see that the remedial model, which isolates the student and the skill from real college contexts, imposes a “fix-it station” tempo and mentality upon both teachers and students. (293)

      The warning notwithstanding, this is precisely what became of BW: it was institutionalized as the “fix-it station.”

      One explanation for the persistence and subordination of basic writing in the college curriculum is that something similar had happened before. First-year composition, situated after basic writing in the college course sequence, had gone before, chronologically speaking, and in so doing had defined the situation. BW was basically a back formation of first-year composition, itself brought into being to address a literacy crisis, one hemmed about with assessments and the search for quick fixes.

      As John Brereton has noted, the pressure on college enrollments was just as intense in the early days of freshman composition as during the dawn of open admissions: college enrollments nearly doubled from 1890–1910, the decades that saw the birth and solidification of first-year composition as a college requirement (7). Most agree that the focus and upshot of this earlier literacy crisis was concentrated at Harvard, partly because of the institution’s stature and influence. And it was rooted in the vision of Harvard’s president at the time, Charles W. Eliot. Edna Hays, in her 1936 book on college entrance requirements, quotes from his annual report of 1873:

      The need for some requisition which should secure on the part of the young men preparing for college proper attention to their own language has long been felt. Bad spelling, incorrectness as well as inelegance of expression in writing, ignorance of the simplest rules of punctuation, and almost entire want of familiarity with English literature, are far from rare among young men of eighteen otherwise well prepared to pursue their college studies. (17–18)

      Social transformations in the wake of the Civil War had brought a new sort of student (and above all, many more students) to the doorsteps of colleges and universities, including Harvard. And Eliot’s pronouncement on their fitness for college study would have its echoes in what was said about open admissions students a century later. Similarly, Shaughnessy’s belief (or at least hope) that educational reform would eradicate what basic writing was created to address is mirrored in Eliot’s conviction that better pre-college preparation would eliminate the need for Harvard’s composition courses. These courses were, after all, conceived less as college instruction than as remediation to make students fit for college work. Mary Trachsel writes, “Eliot proposed that such fundamental literacy instruction was actually the responsibility of the preparatory schools and fully intended the college freshman composition course he instituted in 1874 to be nothing more than a temporary bridge between preparatory schools and college”; nevertheless, “freshman composition soon became ensconced as a permanent fixture of Harvard’s curriculum” (42). The moral of the story is that structures set up as accommodations for new or changed student constituencies do not wither away but instead become self-perpetuating. By 1894, as James Berlin reported in Rhetoric and Reality, the composition course that was supposed to become superfluous became entrenched as the one university requirement at Harvard (20). Within another decade, hundreds of other colleges and universities had made it so as well.

      What could be wrong with that? Well, as Wallace Douglas noted in his now-classic account, that may not be quite the right question to ask: “The interesting questions are those that ask why and how rhetoric in its truncated and debased modern form has been able to survive, and indeed flourish, as the study of written composition, or as practice in the production of written compositions and communications” (99). The answers lie in what happened at Harvard, starting with a president who complained that students came to that institution unable to spell and punctuate correctly or to avoid other telltale signs of being dubious inductees into the club of the educated elite. Thus, wrote Douglas, “the purposes of composition, as it came to be conceived in the latter days of rhetoric” narrowed down to “the acquisition of certain linguistic forms of relatively narrow currency, which today would be said to represent good or appropriate English, but which in more candid times could be described, simply and without apology, as signs of social rank” (110). It was the foredoomed fate of a “brush-up” course to perform a narrower function than opening up the full range of rhetorical possibilities; if this didn’t dumb down what instruction in English might be, it certainly constrained the possibilities. And it’s surely significant that, from Eliot’s first salvo to the entrenched composition requirement’s eventual focus, the instructional emphasis was on making students’ writing presentable. The preoccupation of composition (and later basic writing) with matters of form and surface (often preceded by the word “mere” in indictments of this preoccupation) are rooted in this emphasis.

      In the 1920s Yale, like Harvard before it, found the need to institute a form of basic writing, designated unapologetically as the “Awkward Squad.” Using archival records, Kelly Ritter examined the way this “course” was conducted between 1920 and 1960. The young men designated by their English instructors as belonging to the Squad, which was not listed in the official catalog, “had no support beyond the tutors who drilled them weekly in spelling and grammar, until such time as they were deemed fit to return to the mainstream” (Ritter 21).

      A more serious consequence of Harvard’s fashioning of first-year composition related to institutionalization rather than pedagogy. The implications of the institutional positioning of composition were diagnosed by Albert Kitzhaber in his 1963 doctoral dissertation and were summarized some thirty years later by Donald Stewart, who described Harvard’s impact on subsequent English instruction:

      (1) reducing writing instruction to a concern for superficial mechanical correctness, (2) greatly increasing an unproductive and debilitating fixation on grammar instruction, (3) dissociating student writing . . . from any meaningful social context, and (4) contributing significantly to the division between composition and literature people in English departments, a division which saw writing instruction increasingly become the responsibility of intellectually inferior members of English department staffs. (455)

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