The Thonney Method
In
Teresa Thonney’s article “Teaching the Conventions of Academic Discourse” she
generalizes ways to approach academic writing, suggesting professors use these
conventions to teach their classes. Conveniently, Thonney incorporated six
suggestions early on in her article, making it easy to read. By structuring the
article and separating it into sections with subheadings, it allowed her
article to flow easily, something we can all appreciate. Although students are
not the main audience, I found her suggestions to teachers helpful in my own
writing.
Thonney’s first convention,
“Academic Writers Respond to What Others Have Written about Their Topic”, is
something I often did in my RWS 100 class. Throughout the semester we were
asked to respond to other texts, evaluate their arguments, and provide evidence
as to why it was weak or strong. I was constantly referring to other authors,
addressing important topics, and elaborating on them. Contrarily, it was
required that we not include our opinion. This way, we were simply responding
to the text, rather than “analyzing, synthesizing, or adding to what others
have said” (Thonney, 349). I was applying half of Thonney’s first convention.
This proved to be difficult as the semester went on, seeing as how we discussed
controversial topics such as smoking, but weren’t allowed to give our opinion
on the matter. Nevertheless, I was still analyzing arguments, just not to the
depths as Thonney is discussing here.
I appreciate how Thonney separated
this article, first introducing the main conventions then going in depth about
each one. I also enjoy how she uses her own conventions in her paper. First
introducing her text and why it was important, identifying sources, organizing
sources into separate subheadings, and summarizing her article allowed it to
flow nicely and further prove her ideas on how to teach. This mirrored example of
her text compared to her advice allowed Thonney to not only gain credibility with
her audience but also prove her conventions work and her research is valid. Her
extensive research shows her dedication to helping other teachers, something I admire,
and thought was very helpful to others reading as well. I found it interesting that
her sources shared similar structures although they were all from different genres.
although Thonney incorporated many different aspects of writing into her paper,
there were a few things I found that I did not like.
Thonney’s diction in her text was somewhat wordy and
sophisticated, making it more difficult to read. This may be because we are, of
course, not her main audience, and those who are are much more advanced in
reading academic writing. This was an academic article, so she wrote scholarly.
She appealed to her audience, while not exactly appealing to me. Additionally,
her sources were very well represented however I was not familiar with any of
them. Again, this is because we are not her main audience, but her sources were
credible all the same. This was my first time reading academic writing and I thought
it was interesting to see the many perspectives of things, despite the few things
I did not like.
Overall, I enjoyed reading Thonney’s article and
thought seeing these topics from the teacher’s standpoint was helpful as a
student. Seeing how things can be taught and the different learning techniques
that can be applied allowed me to look at learning from a different angle. Education
can be approached many ways, and I agree with Thonney that these are the most successful.
Not being familiar with the texts she references definitely makes parts of this article difficult to understand. Her primary audience is likely familiar with at least some of this scholarship, and that helps them.
ReplyDeleteSo, Brittany, it took me 3 attempts to actually try and post a comment on your blog. I hope it works cuz this is the third time i have read the entirety of your blog and wondered if it will actually post and this'll probably be my last attempt cuz I'm too stupid to know how to post on your blog. Anyway, you seem to be very informative on your blogs (in general) and I actually really like how you can sum up things nicely. I agree with Thonney using references that I have no idea where she is getting them and how I'm not her primary audience despite it being very relative to any scholarly person. I believe it is a nice and easy thing to read despite the references I don't get. Overall, I don't like how I can never post on your blog.
ReplyDeleteIt actually worked and I'm sorry for the things I said.
DeleteI also agree, she uses so many reference that we don't even know where she gets all these reference from. I also agree that her language in her article is really complicated to read. She doesn't really connect with the audience that well.
ReplyDeleteMost scholarly articles are hard to understand and follow. Surprisingly, her article wasn't that hard to read. She structure her article very thoroughly, helping her audiences to her points very clearly. I agree that she does provide a lot of examples, but I think she couldve connected to her audiences through her own experiences.
ReplyDeleteI feel like you did an excellent job at conveying the authors point. I found it eaasily to follow how you broke down her main points into six seperate ideas. I also enjoyed readinga writting style designed for teachers by teachers.
ReplyDelete