Composition Textbooks

For a few years now I've been going bookless in English Comp I courses--the equivalent to English 101, freshman composition. The reason: perhaps the worst books I've ever read have been composition textbooks. It seems like comp professors--or those who pen comp/rhet texts--have the worst eyes and ears for what makes good writing. Or they might know what makes good writing, but they cannot do it themselves. I don't want to read those books, and I can't imagine any 17-25 year old college student wants to read them either. These texts are so dry, boring, formal, and disparaging of creativity. In lieu of a textbook I've been culling essays from websites or making photocopies or scanning into PDFs for reading, having class sessions where we play grammar games, etc., and running the class--essentially--as a creative nonfiction workshop. But I'm giving some thought to returning to a textbook. I'm so out of date, though (literally, I haven't used a textbook in about 5 years), that I don't know what might make good options.

Here are some examples of crappy composition textbooks: Wyrick's Steps to Writing Well, Rosa and Eschholz's Models for Writers, Lunsford's Everything's an Argument and The Everyday Writer. There are more that I've used and hated, but I don't feel like listing them all. A couple books (from one author, Bruce Ballenger) that I used to like using were The Curious Writer and The Curious Researcher. He seemed to have a more accessible style. But after 2 semesters or so he wore off on me also. This came about especially as a result of students not finding the writing engaging.

I will still use handbooks such as the Bedford, but don't always require that students buy them.

Anyway, anyone have any suggestions? I'm willing to try a textbook again. Textbooks make for less work on my end. Then again, it's not like it's problematic for me to keep reading contemporary lit, finding essays that I like in lit journals, and assigning those as readings for my comp students. Maybe the model I've been using for the last few years actually works.
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Published on August 07, 2011 15:19
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message 1: by Jamie (new)

Jamie Grefe Great post and such a legitimate concern. I teach high school freshman and sophomore English and struggled last year with a reliable and engaging text and I, too, ended up collecting and using essays and ideas from websites as opposed to a composition textbook. This year I am going to try to use two books and see how well they work. They both seem to have great potential, but the true test will be the coming months as I put them into practice. The two books that I'm going to use are CRAFTING THE PERSONAL ESSAY: Writing and Publishing Creative Nonfiction by Dinty W. Moore and THE POEM'S HEARTBEAT: A Manual of Prosody by Alfred Corn. I'm also definitely interested in other suggestions.


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