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“A Friendly Voice and a Smiling Face”: The Emotional Work of Teaching Writing Online. Presented by Amanda Goldrick-Jones Simon Fraser University ACCUTE, 1 June 2008. “Teaching a first-year writing course online...”.
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“A Friendly Voice and a Smiling Face”: The Emotional Work of Teaching Writing Online • Presented by Amanda Goldrick-JonesSimon Fraser University • ACCUTE, 1 June 2008
“Teaching a first-year writing course online...” • ...demands that the instructor enter into an individual tutorial relationship with each student … If you've never taught online, you have no concept of how time-consuming these tasks can be.”(Freeman, 2005a)
What is “emotion work”? • ...the labour required to suppress or induce feelings “to sustain the outward countenance that produces the proper state of mind in others.” (Hochschild, 1983, 2003, p. 7).
Perception or reality...? • Online courses tend to lack personal presence and opportunities for social reciprocity. • These conditions affect the quality of the relationship that you, as a teacher of writing, create with your students as part of their learning.
Our central question... • How do online writing instructors transform their beliefs and the physical actions they would make based on those beliefs (e.g., movement, gestures, eye contact, listening, etc.) in a teaching environment in which they cannot be present physically? (Lo, 2002)
“A friendly voice”: textual empathy • Is it your topic that's making you feel bad? Often, unless you have done a lot of healing, concentrating on something that hurt you badly can be difficult. Unless you have enough distance from the hurt, writing about related material can be very difficult … It seems to me that you write quite well-- you express yourself well in all these messages to me! So the writing isn't the problem. Is the assignment confusing you?(Freeman, 2005b)
“A friendly voice”: textual empathy • ...Before I sent [my] message, I actually read it aloud. I wanted to make sure that it sounded clear, yet not threatening. I remember that when I read the message, I did so with a friendly voice and a smiling face … I checked the previous e-mail messages between the two of us ... reviewed her self-introduction to recall who she was, where she was, what she did … Psychologically, I struggled tremendously as I wrote and posted [my response] … (Lo, 2002)
“A smiling face”: in praise of emoticons... • … Gunawardena and Zittle (1997) found that social presence was a strong predictor of learner satisfaction in a text-based, web-based computer conference and that participants felt a higher sense of social presence by using emoticons …(Andreatta, 2003, p. 92).
“A smiling face”: two teachers’ views I use [emoticons] all the time in corresponding with students with the idea that they should make a difference. (KairosNews Blog) • It helps to use emoticons to convey your tone. Having a conflict or misunderstanding doesn’t mean you don’t like the person any more, but people often forget that reality, or don’t like to say it. It may be most needed during a tense interaction. (Lynch, 2004, p. 126).
“A smiling face”: students’ perceptions • ...[Students felt that] in an online community, • participants should follow the lead of those • around them in determining how formal or • informal their style should be. There seemed to be a strong consensus among students that • emoticons are informal. Along those lines, several postings placed emoticons (along with netspeak) firmly under “casual communication only.” In one or two instances, emoticons were equated with the way a younger generation communicates.(Goldrick-Jones, 2007, The Learn Project)
The rewards of emotional work... • High-quality student interaction ... a growing body of literature portrays the online teaching and learning environment as a personally rewarding and satisfying one for many faculty members” (Thompson, 2004, p. 84). • The formation of new social clusters around common interests, “a community of support and information... like having the corner bar, complete with old buddies and delightful newcomers” (Rheingold, 1998 [also 1993, p. 24]). • ...resulting in more student engagement, mutual support, and motivation.
A labour of love... • How can writing instructors model and mentor productive emotion work in teaching writing online, without adding to their already considerable outlay of time and energy? • How can departments / institutions support this goal? • Questions or comments?
References • •Andreatta, P. (2003). The effect of affective corrective feedback variation in web-based instruction on community college student satisfaction and retention. Unpublished dissertation (123 pp excerpt). University of San Francisco. Available from http://www.usfca.edu/fac-staff/andreattap/dissertation.pdf. • •Freeman, J. (2005a). E-mail copied to author. (Nov. 24). • •Freeman, J. (2005b). E-mail to author. (Nov. 24). • •Hochschild, A. R. (1983, 2003). The managed heart: commercialization of human feeling. Berkeley: U of California Press. • •Lo, Y. G. (2002). Teaching behind the computer screen: an international graduate student’s experiences in online education. Reading online. International Reading Association, Inc. Retrieved 23 Nov. 2005 from http://www.readingonline.org/international/lo/
References, cont’d • •Lynch, M. M. (2004). Learning online: A guide to success in the virtual classroom. New York: Routledge Falmer. • •Reeves, T. C. (2003). Storm clouds on the digital education horizon. Journal of Computing in Higher Education 15 (1): 3-26. [Electronic version.] Retrieved 15 Nov. 2005 from http://scholar.google.com/url?sa=U&q=https://secure.ascilite.org.au/conferences/auckland02/proceedings/papers/key_reeves.pdf • •Rheingold, H. (1998). The virtual community: homesteading on the electronic frontier. [Electronic version]. Retrieved 24 Nov. 2005 from http://www.rheingold.com/vc/book/8.html • •Thompson, M. M. (2004). Engagement or encagement? Faculty workload in the online environment. Proceedings of the 20th Annual Conference on Distance Teaching and Learning. University of Wisconsin: 1-6. [Electronic version.] Retrieved 15 Nov. 2005 from http://scholar.google.com/url?sa=U&q=http://www.wisc.edu/depd/series/thompson.pdf