How is Literature Valuable to You?
This
article made a lot of points about literature, and how to assess it that I haven’t
considered yet, since I am not currently student teaching. I thought it was
very interesting that the article mentions that we as teachers are evaluating
the students’ performance based on what we value in their ability to understand
and produce literature in our class.
In assessment classes I have taken
in the past it was mentioned that we as the teacher get to decide how we assess
or even what we choose to assess. This article made that stand out to me more
in a meaningful way that I have not considered, what I value. How do I want my
students to learn, and how do I want them to show me that they have learned
those intended objectives, and met the goals of the class? I am a firm believer
in not giving traditional tests in the English class that I want to teach. I don’t
think that literature is something that is black and white, even though it is written
in it. (literature humor) Subjects like math and science allow you to find the
correct answer, the definite solution. English does not have that privilege,
there is always going to be another opinion, a different perspective, or a
different world that the text lives in. I think that’s why so many of us are so
passionate about the subject, because we like to see things through different
lenses, we like to argue our point of view until we have made our point crystal
clear, because English is unlike any other subject, there is not a correct way
to read a piece of literature, just like there is no correct way a piece of
literature can make you feel.
Trying to come up with testing
methods that allow for so much creative freedom can be difficult. Trying not to
squander the student’s ability to write or show how they feel, while also
creating an effective and efficient assessment can be tricky on our part. I am
a big fan of testing methods like discussions, group and individual
presentations, essays even though most students cringe at the word, mind maps,
or verbal book reports. There is so much room to be creative in all modes of
testing, and I think that giving students more creative freedom is critical when
they are evaluating literature, and when we evaluate them.