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College:
What Language Is Spoken Here?
When
he was a college freshman, Mike Rose, who is now Associate Director
of Writing Programs at UCLA, found himself overwhelmed by the writing,
reading and listening he needed to do for his courses. He struggled
to understand and use what is often called "the language of
the academy":
People
are taking notes and you are taking notes. You are taking notes
on a lecture you dont understand. You get a phrase, a
sentence, then the next loses you. Its as though youre
hearing a conversation in a crowd or from another roomout
of phase, muted. The man on the stage concludes his lecture
and everyone rustles and you close your notebook and prepare
to leave. You feel a little strange. Maybe tomorrow this stuff
will clear up. Maybe by tomorrow this will be easier. . . .
You
may be wondering how to handle all of the language tasks you face
in college and why college is so much tougher than high school was.
Heres what Mike Rose has to say about students' expectations
of and struggles with college-level courses:
It is not unusual for students to come to the university with
conceptualizations of disciplines that are out of sync with
academic reality. [A] lot of entering freshmen assume that sociology
is something akin to social work, an applied study of social
problems rather than an attempt to abstract a theory about social
interaction and organization. Likewise, some think psychology
will be a discussion of human motivation and counseling, what
it is that makes people do what they do--and some coverage of
ways to change what they do. It comes as a surprise that their
textbook has only one chapter on personality and psychotherapy--and
a half dozen pages on Freud. The rest is animal studies, computer
models of thought, lots of neurophysiology. . . . This dissonance
between the academys and the students definitions
of disciplines makes it hard for students to get their bearings
with material: to know what's important, to see how the pieces
fit together, to follow an argument, to have a sense of what
can be passed over lightly. . . .
The discourse of academics is marked by terms and expressions
that represent an elaborate set of shared concepts and orientations:
alienation, authoritarian personality, the social construction
of the self, determinism, hegemony, . . . and so on. This language
weaves through so many lectures and textbooks, is integral to
so many learned discussions, that its easy to forget what
a foreign language it can be. Freshmen are often puzzled by
the talk they hear in their classrooms, but whats important
to note here is that problem is not simply one of limited vocabulary.
. . . Take, for example, authoritarian personality. The
average university freshman will know what personality
means and can figure out authoritarian; the difficulty
will come from a lack of familiarity with the conceptual resonances
that authoritarian personality has acquired in the discussions
of sociologists and psychologists and political scientists.
How
does this passage relate to your college experience? Which courses
have met your expectations? Which haven't? What "language"
has been the hardest to learn? What helps you learn the language
of the different disciplines you're studying?
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