Perfecting Eloquence: Jesuit Pedagogy in the First-Year Writing Classroom

More on assigning readings

Traditionally, Jesuit Humanities, Grammar, and Rhetoric classes all functioned in the same way: students would read an author that had been approved by the Ratio Studiorum (usually, Homer, Aristotle, and, above all, Cicero), and then attempt to imitate their style. Instructors would "correct" student attempts and teach the class based on these attempts.

A contemporary writing class would hopefully be less rigid in its conception of what is "good," "bad," or "correct," but the underlying principle is the same. Students will use the readings from this course as models to think through things like style, organization, argument, and more. Readings, however, will be from a wide array of authors - both students and professional writers. Moreover, readings should not be interpreted as a standard to meet and imitate, but rather, texts portaying "moves" and ideas that students should consider and experiment with in their own writing.

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