http://theconversation.com/why-the-teaching-of-creative-writing-matters-67659
For the last 30
years or so the rise of creative writing programmes in universities has been
met with seemingly unending howls of derision from all quarters. Hanif
Kureishi, novelist, screenwriter – and professor of creative writing at
Kingston University – described them as a “waste of time”. But universities around the
world beg to differ, as the increasing number of courses and students testify.
The recent Sunday Times league tables for
universities ranked the quality of teaching in creative
writing at The University of Bolton as the best in the country. The programme
there also boasts the highest ranking in terms of student experience.
Given that I am the only
full-time lecturer in creative writing at Bolton – and also led the programme
for two of the three years the recent figures cover – I should be able easily
to explain our success, and why our students rate our teaching so highly. I say
“should”, because I’m not sure of the answer.
There are easy ways to get
students to rate teaching highly. We can tailor the classes to their personal
needs and wants, and give them all high marks. Or we can teach them at a lower
level than we should so that they feel a greater sense of achievement. But at
Bolton we do none of these. So what’s the secret?
The measure of a mark
How you actually go about
judging the quality of teaching – particularly with a subject like creative
writing – is tricky. There are the normal ways that universities use:
peer-assessment, student feedback, the evaluation of staff by professionals who
specialise in methods of teaching and learning and staff development
programmes. And as Bolton is a teaching intensive, research informed university
we do a lot of these things, and I think we do them very well.
Hanif Kureishi, who says
creative writing courses are ‘a waste of time’. andersphoto/Shutterstock.com
But I wonder whether what is
being measured or evaluated in these assessments is more the style of the
teacher, rather than the content. Most assessors are experts in teaching
methods and practices – and it’s unreasonable to expect them to have detailed
knowledge of every subject.
As non-specialists they are
able to measure the levels of student engagement, of academic challenge, of
whether the “learning outcomes” which plague university teaching in creative
writing are being met. And if you measure it this way, then it’s quite possible
that detractors such as Kureishi are right.
A place for play
Except that the
teaching of creative writing, when done well, is about more than the skills and
craft and technique, important as these things are. And as the writer and
lecturer Liam Murray Bell describes, writers must find and
use a consistency of tone,
style and voice.
It’s also about encouraging
students to play, to move beyond their normal styles and subjects of writing,
beyond their use of traditional structural, narrative and poetic forms – and to
ask them to see what happens. In this sense university is a place
for play. Teacher and game designer Eric Zimmerman has defined play as:
The free space of
movement within a more rigid structure. Play exists both because of and also
despite the more rigid structures of a system.
If students are not actively
encouraged to play then we are simply encouraging them to remain as static as
they were when they entered higher education – even if they are more adept at
using “writerly” skills and techniques.
The secret of success
To me it seems there is no
“secret” to good teaching. You do the basics, and you do them as well as you
possibly can. You limit class numbers. You give student-writers the individual
attention they crave. You make sure that your teachers are good writers and
that your writers are good teachers, so that expertise can be shared
effectively.
And you make students read
widely. They should read the classics, I suppose, but they should also read the
“non-classics” – what many academics see as trash fiction. And they should read
their peers and contemporaries too.
Read far and wide to become a
better writer. Pexels
Importantly, they should read things such as
advertising billboards and street signs, the shapes of buildings, the colour of
the pavement, the weather, the look in people’s faces. Writers need to breathe
in so that they can breathe out their own individual reactions and responses.
At Bolton we spend time reading and breathing, and that helps students find
voices and interactions which can blend with the craft of writing to produce
work which means something to them.
Very few students will earn a living as a writer. But
writing is about more than that, and the ability to communicate effectively is
a rare and precious thing. Good teaching
should not be measured in the texts which students produce, then, but in the knowledge
gained through the actions of writing – knowledge which lasts forever.
In the end, if students enjoy
their studies, and believe that they’re gaining skills which are transferable
in the workplace and will last them well beyond university, then perhaps that
is what they see as ‘good teaching’. And
perhaps too they’re the best ones to judge.
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