{"id":32589,"date":"2019-10-14t15:16:17","date_gmt":"2019-10-14t20:16:17","guid":{"rendered":"\/\/www.imrbdigital.com\/?p=32589"},"modified":"2019-10-14t15:16:17","modified_gmt":"2019-10-14t20:16:17","slug":"teaching-innovations-at-vanderbilt-john-bradley-and-teaching-writing","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.imrbdigital.com\/2019\/10\/teaching-innovations-at-vanderbilt-john-bradley-and-teaching-writing\/","title":{"rendered":"teaching innovations at vanderbilt: john bradley and teaching writing"},"content":{"rendered":"

by faith rovenolt, cft undergraduate intern<\/em><\/p>\n

\"\"<\/a>talking with dr. john bradley<\/strong>, director of the writing studio<\/a>, helped me name critical lessons about writing that that i\u2019ve realized firsthand as a vanderbilt student here. i think teachers and students like me can benefit from both the abstract approaches and the concrete tools bradley uses to foster student writing.<\/p>\n

to sum up how bradley views teaching writing, he quoted a recent opinion piece, what critics of student writing get wrong<\/em><\/a>, by composition scholar elizabeth wardle in the chronicle of higher education,<\/p>\n

\u201c\u2026to improve as writers, students need to write frequently, for meaningful reasons, to readers who respond as actual readers do \u2014 with interest in ideas, puzzlement over lack of clarity or logic, and feedback about how to think more deeply and write more clearly to accomplish the writer\u2019s purposes. there is no shortcut.\u201d<\/p>\n

as bradley sees it, there are two important things to keep in mind about writing:<\/p>\n