Page 109 - Composition in Convergence The Impact of New Media On
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78           CHAPTER 3

        ownership of the text is a genuine goal, then why wouldn't  instruc-
        tors encourage this role reversal?
           Nor am I sure that an active reader is an actual coproducer of the
        e-text  in the  ways  Blair and  Takayoshi (in Yancey & Weiser, 1997)
        suggest.  Yes, in  hypertext  particularly,  it  is accurate to  say  that
        readers "write" as they link events in countless ways. But the com-
        poser of the hypertext  document still constructs the links and  im-
        ages in multiple paths to lead readers through  various readings of
        the  text.  Also, it  is still the  hypertext  writer  who  determines the
        possible variations  a reader can make. A similar  point occurs with
        students writing  HTML documents for web sites. The finished web
        site may  be highly interactive and  offer  viewers innumerable per-
        spectives regarding sensory and  support  items. However, the  un-
        derlying HTML code is developed by the  original writer  and  offers
        select  options  for  the future reader, who  then  "writes"  the  docu-
        ment at  a sitting.  So, although  the e-text  reader may be an active
        one compared with traditional print forms, she may not be an  au-
        thentic coproducer of the  e-text.
           The  matters  raised by  Blair  and  Takayoshi (in Yancey  & Weiser,
         1997), as well as those elicited by Wickliff's  language in assignment
        construction  (in Yancey & Weiser,  1997), allude to  why  students do
        not always gain the ownership in their writing promised to them by
        computer-based composition. Because most compositionists still only
        recognize customary  expository or argumentative forms  in writing,
        the  student  writers'  shift  to  a  nonstandard  or  a  mundane  textual
        form—even if the student writer selects a most useful melding of gen-
        res for the context—leads to a corrective reaction from the more tradi-
        tional writing teacher. Instructors' correctives may be anything  from
        overcommenting   on  the  material  or  hypercorrecting word choice,
        grammar    usage,  and  other  sentence-level  errors  to  becoming  a
        coproducer of the student's text. The correctives emerge when and if
        instructors perceive that the student writers are not somehow creat-
        ing threads in the e-text that do not make meaning happen in predict-
        able, learned ways. What arises in these situations  is the conservative
        voice of writing assessment; the instructor's need and expectation to
        evaluate,  to draw conclusions, about  the text  based on what can be
        normed or replicated.
           Thus, the ownership issue of student e-texts is complicated by  how
        instructors view students' work and student learning. Some composi-
        tionists  see writing  instruction  as  teaching  sets  of  discrete, portable
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