Teaching
Peer Review

Purpose
Peer
reviews serve many pedagogical functions: supports collaborative learning,
provides students with a real audience for their papers, helps students
to review their own work before the final revisions, teaches them good
composition strategies for workplace writing, as well as others. Yet,
instructors sometimes feel that they do not get enough "bang for
their buck" when they ask students to review each other's work; in
other words, they do not see students' papers improving enough to justify
the amount of time spent on this practice. Therefore, in today's class
we will examine both reasons for doing peer review and good strategies
for teaching it.

Before
Class
- Read
Paton "Approaches to Productive Peer Review" [BB]
- Mangeldorf
& Schlumberger, "ESL Student Response Stances in Peer Review
Task" [BB]
- Read
Leverenz, "Peer Response in the Multicultural Composition Classroom"
[JAC,
14.1]
- Bring
in draft of Semester Syllabus
- Submit
WikiComp
Revision #5 on WetPaint
- Note
Last Day to Drop Classes is November 10, 2009
FreeWrite
Answer the
following questions in "Week 11" thread of the Blackboard
Discussion Board. You have the first ten minutes of class.
Some
instructors characterize peer review as a waste of class time. Do you
think it is? Why? If not, how would you design peer review for your class?
If so, how would you handle the final stages of the writing process? Why?
Discussion:
To PR or not to PR
The
discussion today
will address the following questions:
- What
questions or comments do you have about these articles?
- What
would your pedagogical goals be for doing peer review?
- What
practices would you develop to achieve these goals? What are the advantages
and disadvantages of talk, worksheets, or letter writing for peer review?
- How would
you teach these practices to your students?
Activity:
Designing Writing Assignments
Part
1: Review Strategy
As a class we will develop a strategy for reviewing our peer's semester
syllabus based upon the readings and our discussion of the
readings.
Part
2: Conducting Review
You
will exchange sample syllabus with one (or two) other person. Go back
and reread the assignment for the semester
syllabus paying close attention to the expectations and criteria.
Read through the student's draft paying attention to how your partner
has responded to the assignment.
After
you read the draft, use the strategy that we have developed in Part
1 to review your peer's work.

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