Monday, October 10, 2011

Why Teach the Profile?


For many years, I've taught the profile as a writing genre in my composition classes, and I include it as well in Curious Writer. I like it for several reasons. It is much like the more academic "case study," a methodology that is used in a number of disciplines, but aside from its academic relevance, I'm drawn to how it fits into the kind of sequence that Moffett talks about--writing from the self outward. And yet, I often find that I don't really like what students do with it. Because they don't spend sufficient time collecting information from their interview subjects, the pieces are often unfocused and uninteresting. They frequently don't choose subjects well, either--a friend, a parent, or perhaps a teacher--and the essays are written from memory rather than listening. They become just another version of the personal essay.

This semester, I'm trying something different. The Library of Congress' "Veteran's History Project" provides a wealth of online material about men and women who served in the major conflicts of the last half century or more--WWI, WWII, Korea, and Vietnam. This material includes audio and sometimes video interviews with each vet (and there are thousands of them), transcripts, letters, and photographs. Lurking there are stories, and really compelling ones, about an individual's participation in some of the most dramatic public events of our time. This is exactly the kind of information that will challenge student researchers to shape a narrative from the relatively raw materials.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

What about also using such interviews or documentaries from NPR's "This American Life" podcasts online? These are amazing stories told about real people in ways that may lend easily to writing...?
J