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- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!agate!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!cleveland.Freenet.Edu!bf455
- From: bf455@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (Bonita Kale)
- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Subject: Re: Teaching writing
- Date: 7 Oct 1992 10:20:10 GMT
- Organization: Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH (USA)
- Lines: 40
- Message-ID: <1audkqINN2sm@usenet.INS.CWRU.Edu>
- References: <AeoP96y00YV9M2uJ8j@andrew.cmu.edu> <394@mindlink.bc.ca>
- Reply-To: bf455@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (Bonita Kale)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: slc4.ins.cwru.edu
-
-
- In a previous article, bf23+@andrew.cmu.edu (Brian Frumolt) says:
-
- >Alan Barclay writes:
- >
- >"Some excellent writers seem to have an implicit understanding of what
- >makes good writing, but are unable to isolate what it is they know, nor
- >to make it clear to others. This sort of knowledge seems magical to me.
- >I myself must understand a technique or concept well enough to teach it,
- >before I can actually use it well. I find the difference fascinating."
- >
- >This is the difference, I think, between the writing being a skill, and
- >the writing being an art. To have a skill and not understand what makes
- >you able to write, or even why your writing is good, does not make you
- >nearly as talented as if you not only know how to write, but know WHY
- >you know how to write, and are able to teach those principles to others.
- >
- >Being able to set down a heuristic, and explain what is going on when
- >you do what you do best, is a sign of truly understanding what it is
- >that you are doing.
-
-
- Hey, wait a minute, Brian! I will agree that the ability to understand
- what you are doing as you write, and to explain it to others, is a talent.
- Therefore, a person who has that as well as the ability to write, has two
- talents instead of one. In that sense, the person who can only do it, but
- not explain it, might possibly be said to be not "nearly as talented."
-
- On the other hand, what if the do-but-not-explain person plays the bassoon,
- too? Then they'd be even--two talents to two talents.
-
- That's not really so far-fetched. I don't see any evidence that the person
- who can explain what s/he is doing is necessarily better at it than the
- person who can't. There are a lot of people who can explain what a writer
- is doing, who couldn't do it themselves. It's a separate ability, like
- gardening or cooking. You can be very good at explaining, and still not
- able to get a line down that doesn't sound muffled and cottony. Or you can
- write prose like an arrow, and not really know why.
-
- Bonita Kale
-