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- Comments: Gated by NETNEWS@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU
- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!auvm!MAGNUS.ACS.OHIO-STATE.EDU!DHOGSETT
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- Message-ID: <9211090455.AA01660@bottom.magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.mbu-l
- Date: Sun, 8 Nov 1992 23:55:43 EST
- Sender: "Megabyte University (Computers & Writing)" <MBU-L@TTUVM1.BITNET>
- From: David S Hogsette <dhogsett@MAGNUS.ACS.OHIO-STATE.EDU>
- Subject: Hypertext in comp and lit
- Lines: 54
-
- I just recently subscribed to this MBU listing, and I'm still very unsure of
- the various discursive conventions and commands. I'm not even sure if this
- letter will be mailed to the readers subscribing to this listing. I have to
- start sometime, so be patient with me as I become more comfortable and
- proficient with this new (to me, at least) medium.
-
- I have read many letters pertaining to using hypertext in the classroom, and I
- would like to share, albeit briefly, what some of us in the Computers in
- Composition and Literature (CC&L) program at Ohio State are brewing for the
- near future. This quarter we installed Storyspace (a hypertext program for the
- Macintosh) into one of our computer classrooms and are piloting first year
- writing courses centered around writing in hypertext. Since I am new to the
- CC&L program, I am not yet completely clear how some of our teachers plan to
- use Storyspace in their classrooms; however, I can share with you what I plan
- to do next quarter.
-
- I will be teaching what's called 111C--a computer-assisted literature-based
- first year writing class. Basically, we will be reading shortstories,
- discussing them in class (both orally and via synchronous network discussions
- using Aspects), and writing interpretive essays. The students will have to
- produce three major paper projects. The first will be the traditional
- interpretive paper writen by each individual student. The second will be a
- traditional linear text produced by collaborative groups (4-5 students work to
- produce one document). The last project will be to create a hypertext
- document, using Storyspace. This document will not be merely an interpretive
- paper, but, instead, will be an interactive, hypertextual environment which
- includes the text to be interpreted, students' reactions to the text,
- contextual information informing their various understandings of the text,
- other critics' interpretations of the text, and their own collaborative
- interpretation of the text. The interesting part of this project--and the most
- difficult to grade!!--will be tracing the students' electronic links that they
- will make among the bits and chunks of information they use, links which both
- create meaning and represent the process of that meaning-making.
-
- I am very excited to see how this turns out. My goal is to introduce them to a
- new way of thinking, writing, and interacting with literary texts, and this
- introduction will be, strategically so, gradual. That is, I make them
- comfortable with writing traditional texts, then nudge them into collaboration
- and then, finally, into working in hypertext. I think that writing in
- hypertext allows for denaturing traditional linear writing strategies, and this
- denaturing leads, in my estimation, to a production of polyvocal texts which do
- not strive for closure or an answer to a question (like, what does this story
- mean) but, instead, foreground the questioning process. But I ramble.
-
- That should be all for now. Like I said, I'm not even sure this letter will be
- received by anyone. But if you do read it, I would appreciate any feedback or
- reaction. Also, I plan to create a neverending anthology of literature and
- interpretation using Storyspace, a project I've already begun (I call in Entre
- Nous). I'm sure I'll be writing about it later.
-
- Excited and confused,
-
-
- David S. Hogsette
-