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Help From A Hoarse Horse: Homonym Exposure and Journalism Students' Writing Grades
by
Bruce L. Plopper, Professor and Sonny Rhodes, Assistant professor
School of Mass Communication University of Arkansas at Little Rock 2801 S. University Ave. Little Rock, AR 72204-1099
(501) 569-8375 [log in to unmask]
Scholastic Journalism Division AEJMC Annual Meeting San Antonio, Texas August 2005
Help From A Hoarse Horse: Homonym Exposure and Journalism Students' Writing Grades
ABSTRACT
Using a longitudinal design, this study investigated the effect 11 weeks of homonym exposure had on journalism students' writing class grades. Results showed that for journalism majors receiving such exposure, post-treatment writing class GPAs increased slightly but not significantly; however, the writing class GPAs of journalism majors not receiving homonym exposure declined significantly. The writing class GPAs of non-majors remained stable, with or without homonym exposure. Implications for journalism writing class pedagogy were discussed.
Help From A Hoarse Horse: Homonym Exposure and Journalism Students' Writing Grades
Introduction In their seminal study of ways that high school journalism experiences affected students' later academic performance, Dvorak, Lain, and Dickson (1994) found that high school journalism students who completed formal journalism classes and/or participated in hands-on journalism activities performed better academically in a number of ways, as compared to students without exposure to high school journalism. Areas in which the journalism students significantly outperformed their non-journalism counterparts were overall high school GPAs, high school English GPAs, high school social studies GPAs, high school math GPAs, and high school science GPAs; ACT Composite scores, ACT English scores, and ACT social studies scores; grades in their first college freshman English and English composition classes; and ACT College Outcome Measures Program scores for overall writing, writing to an audience, and language use. Additionally, researchers have investigated potential relationships between other factors and college journalism class grades. For example, Plopper and Rollberg (1996) measured associations between grades in students' first journalism writing class and the following three factors: high school ACT English scores, GPAs in college freshman English classes, and performance on diagnostic writing tests. The only strong relationship they found was between organizational writing skills and journalism writing class grades. While overall past or concurrent performance of one type or another may be linked to performance in journalism writing courses, another worthy avenue of inquiry asks whether specific rhetorical device training affects writing performance. This study investigated whether long-term homonym exposure had any effect on students' GPAs in subsequent writing classes. Help From A Hoarse Horse Page 2 Review of Literature Teachers in various disciplines have struggled with the poor writing skills students bring with them into academic environments. The literature is filled with how educators have observed challenges to teaching writing in a variety of contexts, and on the success or failure of strategies employed in working with a wide array of students, including students in commonly taught college classes, students for whom English is a second language, and students with language learning disabilities. For example, Smith, Broughton, and Copley (2005) noted, "When economists discuss how to promote student learning, particularly at the undergraduate level, the talk often turns to writing" (p. 43) The authors presented a series of writing assignments aimed at helping students develop their abilities to evaluate and critique others' written economic work, and thus discover what makes good writing. Another business-discipline study of student writing involved Chinese students in an MBA program at a Canadian university (Raymond & Parks, 2002). The researchers evaluated how these students coped with the challenges associated with moving from an English for Academic Purposes program, where teachers emphasized language, to MBA courses, where professors emphasized content. The study explored differences in how the students oriented themselves to the reading and writing assignments in each area. In another study of international students, Sasaki (2004) investigated changes in Japanese students' English writing abilities over a 3.5-year period and reported on improvements in the students' English proficiency, composition quality and confidence in writing. One finding was that a contributing factor to improved writing ability among the students was increased time spent in "rhetorical refining," which referred to decisions about language use through attention to linguistic detail. Help From A Hoarse Horse Page 3 In a report of ongoing assessment programs that led to changes in how history students were taught to write research papers, Olwell and Delph (2004) noted that many of their students unfortunately practiced a writing process in which they researched, wrote, and revised a paper in a 48-hour period before it was due. Under their department's process-writing approach, educators teach students that writing should be a semester-long process that involves multiple stages, and this incremental process allows instructors to provide written or oral comments as a student's paper evolves through the semester. When geography students' writing was analyzed, Heyman (2004) argued that they needed more instruction in writing to help make them more active members of the classroom and community. Instructors need to provide more explanation of writing expectations and evaluation methods, he wrote, while students need feedback and opportunities to revise. After working with younger students with language learning disabilities (LLD), Brice (2004) noted that writing requires knowledge of many basic language skills and that these students found "
it difficult to integrate language skills into academic writing assignments" (p. 38) One strategy she suggested to improve LLD students' writing abilities was to include the use of analogies, antonyms, synonyms, and multiple-meaning words. To cope with the challenges to teaching writing, educators also have explored strategies that include using approaches that run the gamut from computer-assisted instruction to humor. One educator, noting that many students entering journalism and mass communication programs lack basic grammar and punctuation skills, said schools "
must find a way to help students improve their skills without reducing the time student and faculty members have available for other instruction" (Hanson, 1990, p. 43). She also said computer-assisted instruction offered a possible solution to these problems and, in reviewing relevant research, concluded that Help From A Hoarse Horse Page 4 journalism and mass communication schools could use computer-assisted instruction to teach remedial grammar and punctuation with confidence that it would be effective; however, before implementing such a method of instruction, Hanson cautioned that it is essential to first have sufficient computer hardware, the highest-quality software, and qualified personnel to make sure students properly use the hardware and software. Her literature review regarding software programs, including two that focused on using homonyms in teaching grammar, generally found that the software did not measure up in terms of such criteria as using good instructional methods, being free of errors, and being motivating. Peters (1992), arguing for a sense of humor in teaching grammar, investigated how humor might be used "to overcome student hesitancy about learning grammar, to provide an air of relevancy which might encourage greater student interest and participating, and to offer opportunity to expand grammar application beyond the classroom" (p. 12). Peters contended, "It can be interesting for students to discover that their own punning and wit often turns on a point of grammar" (p. 15). Similarly, Tower (1998) asserted "
there are many important reasons to study children's use and comprehension of humor, and to make a place for humor in our writing classrooms" (p. 11). To "get" humor, Tower wrote, "students will need to understand homophones, multiple meanings, metaphor, syntax and grammar" (p. 12). She concluded that "
we are only just beginning to help students incorporate humor into their writing. Research has clearly demonstrated the importance of humor in social and language development, but more work needs to be to done to support and guide children's use of humor in their writing" (p. 16). Concomitant with the calls for use of rhetorical devices to hone writing skills, from the elementary school to the college campus, educators have called for broader application of Help From A Hoarse Horse Page 5 grammatical rules and punctuation throughout the curriculum. In support of instilling in young writers the ability to use grammatical rules and punctuation, Phillips (1999) wrote, "Young writers who know how to use correctly the grammar of their language are cross-country skiers given downhill slopes, walkers given wings. They are freed by their skills in grammar and usage" (pp. 14-15). Phillips, however, maintained, "From kindergarten through middle school and secondary school, fear runs roughshod among educators that to teach grammatical rules and punctuation along with writing will inhibit the writer's expression" (p. 14). Henderson (2002) echoed that sentiment. "The need to teach basic grammar never has been greater as journalism programs expand their focus to match the workforce skills needed in this era of modern media" (p. 230). He studied the efficacy of using a Web-based grammar-checking program with the acronym TAGS (Targeted Approach to Grammar System) to prepare articles for student newspapers, and he concluded that while the TAGS method of teaching "
can be effective, it also is clear from the literature that any use of a grammar checker should be accompanied by a full classroom discussion of its use and the grammar points that are targeted" (p. 242). Although the articles mentioned above reflect attention to student writing, other research has examined specific factors linked to journalistic writing ability. In research on high school students' performances on Advanced Placement Examination in English Language and Composition, Dvorak, Lain, and Dickson (1994) and Dvorak (1998) asked whether high school students who take intensive journalistic writing to prepare for the exam pass at a rate similar to that of students who take English composition to prepare. Over a period of nine years, advanced journalism students passed at a higher rate than their counterparts in all but two years. In his 1998 article, Dvorak wrote, "Clearly, results of this Help From A Hoarse Horse Page 6 study indicate that such [an intensive journalism] course matches up well with the traditional AP English composition courses that most students take in preparation for the exam" (p. 12). Along similar lines, Plopper and Rollberg (1996) studied college students in a sophomore-level journalism course, correlating the students' entry-level news writing grades with a set of variables that included evaluations of their essay-writing skills. Students in five news-writing classes over the course of two semesters were asked to write a 500-600-word diagnostic essay on one of three topics they were provided. The essays were then evaluated on organization, language usage, and spelling, rather than on journalistic style. Professors then placed the essays in one of three categories: adequate, needs some improvement, and needs substantial improvement. The study revealed that organization scores and language skills scores "
may provide some guidance for enhancing student success in the entry-level news writing class" (p. 7). Included in the study's findings was that organizational skills were "most likely to enhance success, probably because students who can present their ideas in an organized manner are also the ones who can successfully present the types of material required for news writing, in the style required for news writing" (p. 7). Included in Plopper and Rollberg's findings was the report of a low correlation between students' grades in the news writing class and their grades in English composition classes. The researchers stated that this correlation was not surprising because mass media writing classes at their university tended to be product-based, while English composition classes there tended to be process-based. In a study that examined from the students' perspective the interplay between English composition and journalism, Olson and Dickson (1995) asked 300 college freshmen in Help From A Hoarse Horse Page 7 journalism programs at eight universities to rate the value of the writing instruction they received in their first freshman English composition course in several areas, including its value to their journalistic writing. One key finding was that only 17.5 percent of the respondents rated the writing instruction in the composition class as being highly useful to journalistic writing, 51.2 percent found it a little useful or not at all useful, and 31.3 percent found it moderately useful (p. 50). As for comparing instruction in skills areas, the students indicated they received better instruction in nine skills areas (for example, writing concisely, using correct grammar, writing in an organized manner) in their first journalism writing course than in their first English composition class. The two areas that the English composition class was considered better was writing creatively and using your opinions (p. 51). Olson and Dickson concluded that freshman composition was not especially beneficial to journalism students, but that journalism courses provided "
better instruction in nine of 11 skill areas, including using correct spelling and grammar" (p. 53). Ultimately, they recommended, "Journalism educators should
examine their options for strengthening the foundation for their students to increase the chances that their graduates will be adequately prepared to pursue careers that require strong writing skills" (p. 54). It is evident that many questions about student writing have been answered by previous studies, and that researchers from several disciplines have suggested there is or might be value in a focused attempt to use rhetorical devices to teach writing ability. There is, however, scant reported research on whether intensive training with rhetorical devices does indeed improve student writing ability. This study examines whether exposure to homonyms provides such an effect. Help From A Hoarse Horse Page 8 Methodology To answer the question of whether long-term exposure to homonym training has an effect on post-homonym-exposure grades in writing classes, a longitudinal study of students taking the first journalism writing course at a metropolitan state university in the South was conducted. This course is populated by journalism majors and minors; students in the public relations business major and in the professional and technical writing major, whose programs require the class; and students selecting the class as an elective. The study began in the fall 2000 semester and continued through each fall and spring semester until at least 100 students had completed the course. Also, to maintain environmental similarity for the courses involved, the study included only semesters in which two traditional (non-Web-based and non-telecourse) sections of the course were offered. One section was designated randomly as the homonym treatment (HT) section, and one section was designated randomly as the control section, without any special homonym exposure (NHT). Six instructors taught the 10 sections, with three full-time instructors and one adjunct instructor teaching the five HT classes over time, and three full-time instructors and one adjunct instructor teaching the NHT sections over time. One full-time instructor taught both two HT sections and two NHT sections over time. Ultimately, to meet the goal of at least 100 students, three fall semesters and two spring semesters were involved, from fall 2000 through spring 2003, with the spring 2002 semester being omitted because only one traditional section of the course was offered. The homonym treatment consisted of 11 weeks of homonym exposure. During the first week of exposure, the study's director discussed homonyms with the students and described the process that would take place during the course of the semester. Students were told the activity Help From A Hoarse Horse Page 9 was an attempt to improve their attention to words and to increase their vocabularies. In each of the first 10 weeks, students were given a list of 20 homonym sets during one day of class and instructed to look up definitions for words they did not know, in preparation for a homonym quiz the next time the class met. The quiz asked students to provide definitions of only 10 homonym words (not sets) from the original 20 sets, and the same person graded all of the homonym quizzes during the study. Generally, eight to nine of the homonym quiz words were not oft-used homonyms such as "its, there, and two." Instead, they were less-frequently used words such as "berth, bier, and sord." Over the semesters involved, quiz words were varied, in an attempt to minimize the effects of information sharing among students enrolled in various HT classes. In week 10, after the quiz, the study's director visited each HT class and explained the assignment for week 11, designated as "Homonym Heaven." Students were instructed to create five jokes or phrases involving homonyms, which they would be expected to share with their classmates. They were given several examples of such creations, e.g., "What would you call a Shetland pony with a sore throat? Answer: A hoarse horse." After students completed their first journalism writing course, they were tracked academically until either they had graduated or until they had completed at least 70 GPA hours toward their 124-hour degrees and were enrolled in the spring 2005 semester. This criterion was intended to eliminate from the study those non-persistent students who may not have been taking their classes seriously. Students were discarded from the study if 1) they had not completed two writing courses either before or concurrently with the initial journalism writing course; 2) they did not complete at least two subsequent writing courses beyond the initial journalism writing class (intended to eliminate single-instructor grade influences); 3) they did not complete the minimum number of hours described above; 4) they failed the initial journalism writing class Help From A Hoarse Horse Page 10 because of nonattendance without withdrawal (determined by interviewing faculty of record); 5) they failed a subsequent writing course because of nonattendance without withdrawal or because of plagiarism (also determined by interviewing faculty of record); 6) they had repeated a writing course and had earned a grade different from the original grade; or 7) they had gaps of more than five years between taking any two relevant courses designated for the study (intended to mitigate any life experiences that might tend to confound the data). These criteria were followed to obtain as pure a group of measurements as possible by maintaining a subject pool characterized by persistence in degree pursuit and timely completion of relevant course work. At the end of the study's time frame in fall 2004, chosen to allow students in the last HT/NHT semester enough time to demonstrate persistence and to complete at least two subsequent writing classes, the following data were analyzed: students' overall GPAs before and after their initial journalism course semester, but not including that semester; GPAs in writing classes before and in writing classes after their initial journalism course semester, with "before" GPAs including writing classes taken concurrently with the initial journalism class; GPAs in the initial journalism writing class; and scores on homonym quizzes. Several statistical t-tests for correlated samples were calculated for appropriate relationships, as were several correlations. Results Of the students initially enrolled in the 10 sections of the first journalism writing class, 59 completed the homonym treatment (HT) classes and 61 completed the non-homonym treatment classes (NHT). Subsequently, after a review of these students' academic records, 31 HT students and 30 NHT students were discarded from the analysis for one or more of the reasons noted above. The number one reason for discarding students was failure to complete at least two writing courses after completing either the HT or NHT class. Help From A Hoarse Horse Page 11 The remaining 29 HT students consisted of 10 journalism majors and 19 non-majors, while the remaining 30 NHT students consisted of 17 journalism majors and 13 non-majors. Only one HT group member and one NHT group member had earned fewer than 100 credits at the time of the analysis. A statistical analysis of overall GPAs before and after the HT/NHT classes showed both groups significantly improved. As may be seen in Table 1, the HT group's overall GPA increased from 3.15 to 3.39 (t=3.07, df= 28, p<.01); the NHT group's overall GPA --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 1: "Before" and "After" Overall GPAs by Group
Before After GPA GPA
HT Group (N=29) 3.15 3.39** J-Majors (N=10) 3.01 3.31 Non-Majors (N=19) 3.22 3.44* NHT Group (N=30) 3.00 3.29*** J-Majors (N=17) 2.98 3.15* Non-Majors (N=13) 3.03 3.48** *p<.05, **p<.01, ***p<.001 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- increased from 3.00 to 3.29 (t=4.17, df=29, p<.001). An analysis of before-and-after GPAs of J-Majors and Non-Majors in both groups showed that in the HT group, only the 19 Non-Majors significantly improved their overall GPAs (t=2.39, df=18, p<.05), although the GPAs of the 10 J-Majors did improve by .3 of a grade level; in the NHT group, both the 17 J-Majors and the 13 Non-Majors significantly improved their overall GPAs (Majors: t=2.98, df=16, p<.05; Non-Majors: t=3.9, df=12, p<.01). Because a variety of factors can contribute to overall GPAs, additional analyses were performed. Before examining those results, it should be noted that for all before-and-after writing class comparisons, GPAs were calculated for students with at least two writing classes Help From A Hoarse Horse Page 12 before and at least two writing classes after. In terms of types of classes taken before and after
the HT/NHT classes (see Table 2), it generally was true that most students had completed only --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 2: Mean Number of Writing Class Types Completed "Before" and "After" HT/NHT classes
HT Students NHT Students Mean J-Majors Non-Majors J-Majors Non-Majors Total Mean Number Before Classes
Gen-Ed Classes 1.9 2.1 2.2 1.9 2.1
J-Classes 0.4 0.0 0.2 0.0 0.1
English/rhetoric Classes 0.3 1.2 0.2 0.7 0.6
Mean Total 2.6 3.3 2.6 2.6
Mean Number After Classes
Advanced J-Classes 4.2 0.3 3.3 1.0 2.0
Advanced English/rhetoric 1.2 2.8 1.9 2.5 2.2 Classes
Mean Total 5.4 3.1 5.2 3.5 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
the two English composition classes that are part of the university's general education requirements. Also, it generally was true that after their HT/NHT classes, most J-Majors completed more advanced journalism classes than advanced English/rhetoric classes, and most Non-Majors completed more advanced English/rhetoric classes than advanced journalism classes. Also, the J-Majors in both groups completed almost the same average number of writing classes before and after the HT/NHT classes, while there was slightly more variation among Help From A Hoarse Horse Page 13 classes completed by the HT/NHT Non-Majors. The first additional analysis examined overall writing class GPAs before and after the HT/NHT classes. Results showed that in the HT group, average writing class GPAs rose insignificantly by a mere .03 GPA increment. In the NHT group, average writing GPAs dropped insignificantly by a mere .05 GPA increment. Analyses of before-and-after writing class GPAs of sub-groups within the two larger groups, however, did reveal some differences (see Table 3). --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 3: "Before" and "After" Writing Class GPAs by Group
Before After GPA GPA
HT Group (N=29) 3.50 3.53 J-Majors (N=10) 3.37 3.41 Non-Majors (N=19) 3.57 3.59 NHT Group (N=30) 3.30 3.25 J-Majors (N=17) 3.37 3.06* Non-Majors (N=13) 3.22 3.57 *p<.05 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- In the HT group, journalism majors' writing class GPAs rose insignificantly by a .04 GPA increment; in the NHT group, journalism majors' writing class GPAs dropped significantly by a .31 GPA increment (t=2.39, df=16, p<.05). In contrast, both in the HT group and in the NHT group, the GPAs of non-majors rose insignificantly, although the NHT non-majors sub-group nearly reached significance (t=2.12, df=12, p=.055). While the analyses described above were performed on the comparative GPAs earned by each individual student, t-test analyses also were completed on matched pairs of journalism majors and on matched pairs of non-majors. Of the 10 journalism majors in the HT group and the 17 journalism majors in the NHT group, seven in each group were perfectly matched in terms of Help From A Hoarse Horse Page 14 number of writing classes taken before the HT/NHT classes and nearly perfectly matched in "before" writing class GPAs (six sets were perfectly matched, and one set had a .19 GPA difference, with the NHT student having the higher "before" GPA). As Table 4 shows, after the students were matched, an analysis of their "after" writing class GPAs yielded a significant difference (t=3.19, df=6, p<.05). In fact, the average "after" writing class GPA of the HT journalism majors was 3.57, as compared with a 2.90 average --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 4: Comparison of "After" Writing Class GPAs for Matched Groups
Before GPA Before GPA After GPA After GPA of HT Group of NHT Group of HT Group of NHT Group
Overall (N=13) 3.42 3.44 3.66 3.28*
J-Majors (N=7) 3.28 3.31 3.57 2.90* Non-Majors (N=6) 3.58 3.58 3.76 3.72 *p<.05 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "after" writing class GPA of the NHT journalism majors. Of the non-majors in the two groups, six in each group could be perfectly matched in terms of number of "before" writing classes taken and nearly perfectly matched in "before" writing class GPAs (four sets were perfectly matched and two sets had GPA differences of .17, with the two higher "before" GPAs being evenly distributed between the two groups). An analysis of "after" writing class GPAs for these sets showed a statistically insignificant average difference of -.04. It should be noted that an analysis of the "after" writing class GPAs of the combined matched pairs groups showed a significant difference between the means, with the "after" mean writing class GPA of the HT students being 3.66 and the "after" mean writing class GPA of the NHT students being 3.28 (t=2.19, df=12, p<.05). Help From A Hoarse Horse Page 15 In addition to computing t-tests for correlated samples, three sets of correlations were computed. One set involved the relationship between grades earned in the initial journalism writing class and mean scores on homonym quizzes (see Table 5). This analysis yielded a ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 5: HT Group Correlations Involving Initial Journalism Writing Course Grades, Mean Homonym Scores, and "After" Writing Classes GPAs
J-Course Homonyms J-Course by by by Homonyms After GPA After GPA
HT Group Overall r =.565** r =.487** r =.466* J-Majors r =.642* r =.363 r =.410 Non-Majors r =.569* r =.651** r =.559* *p<.05, **p<.01 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- significant correlation coefficient of .565 (t=3.557, df=27, p<.01), for all students in the HT group. Similar relationships were found both for the sub-group of HT journalism majors (r =.642, t=2.367, df=8, p<.05) and the sub-group of HT non-majors (r =.569, t=2.851, df=17, p<.05). Another set of correlations involved the relationship between mean scores on homonym quizzes and "after" writing class GPAs. For the overall HT group, this analysis yielded a significant correlation coefficient of .487 (t=2.9, df=27, p<.01), but the results for the sub-groups showed a marked difference. For journalism majors, the correlation was low (r =.363) and not significant; for non-majors, the correlation was higher (r=.651) and statistically significant (t=3.536, df=17, p<.01). The third set of correlations involved the relationship between grades earned in the initial journalism writing course and "after" writing class GPAs. This analysis also yielded a significant Help From A Hoarse Horse Page 16 correlation coefficient (r =.470) for the overall group (t=2.735, df=27, p<.05), but once again, correlations for the sub-groups were markedly different. For journalism majors, the correlation was lower (r =.410) and not significant; for non-majors, the correlation was higher (r =.559) and statistically significant (t=2.782, df=17, p<.05). Discussion Despite the limitation of small sample sizes, it is clear that for the samples of persistent journalism students involved in this study, there is a relationship between long-term homonym exposure and grades in subsequent writing classes. Although the relationship generally was not evident when overall data from the HT group were compared to overall data from the NHT group, it was clearly evident when data from sub-groups were analyzed. One finding, that overall GPAs were higher for both the HT and NHT groups after completing the initial journalism writing class, is not surprising. One would expect that as a cohort of students approaches graduation, the cohort's overall GPAs would rise because 1) poor students with low GPAs would have either flunked out or dropped out of the cohort, 2) the remaining students would become more mature in an educational sense and better able to cope with college-level courses, and 3) students would most likely be taking more courses in their majors and minors, thus resulting in fewer low grades from general education classes they may not have cared about very much. The reason that a statistically different rise in overall GPAs of the HT J-Majors group was not found probably lies in the small sample size (N=10), for which effects might not show up in a statistical test. It should be noted, however, that the overall rise in GPA for this group was the second best increase (.3 of a grade increment) among the four sub-groups tested. Also of note is that the overall rise in GPA for the NHT J-Majors group represented the smallest incremental rise among the four sub-groups (.17 of a grade increment). Help From A Hoarse Horse Page 17 When comparative performance in classes dedicated to writing was analyzed, an effect among NHT J-Majors became more clear: they were the only sub-group to suffer a statistically significant decline in writing class GPA. In contrast, the HT group overall and the HT sub-groups showed stability in their comparative writing class GPAs, and the NHT Non-Majors sub-group actually experienced a noticeable (though not significant) rise in its writing class GPA. While the small size of the latter group (N=13) may have blurred the statistical outcome, the overall data nonetheless suggest that long-term exposure to homonyms may have, at the very least, a protective effect for journalism majors taking advanced journalism classes. In turn, this raises a question addressed by previous researchers: Do journalism writing courses differ significantly from writing courses in other disciplines, in terms of both structure and content? As mentioned above, other researchers have suggested that this is the case, and thus it might be reasonable to believe that writing class outcomes depend in part upon the writing path taken, i.e., journalism majors taking advanced journalism classes and non-majors taking advanced English/rhetoric classes might be expected to have similarly good post HT/NHT writing class GPAs. While this was true for Non-Majors, it was not the case for J-Majors, as those J-Majors in the NHT group suffered a subsequent and significant writing class GPA decline despite the marked similarities in mean numbers of writing classes taken before and after the HT/NHT classes. In fact, when data for J-Majors and Non-Majors were scrutinized in matched groups, it was found that the J-Majors who had had homonym exposure also had significantly higher subsequent writing class GPAs than did the J-Majors without such exposure. This was true even though the two groups had virtually the same "before" writing class GPAs. In contrast, the Non- Majors' "before" and "after" GPAs did not vary significantly between groups. These findings Help From A Hoarse Horse Page 18 support the idea that long-term homonym exposure has a protective effect for J-Majors. They also support the idea that advanced journalism courses require different skills than do advanced English/rhetoric classes, and that homonym exposure helps students with those skills. Perhaps it is merely an increased propensity to pay closer attention to content, for both advanced reporting class content and homonym use involve just that: paying attention. On the other hand, advanced English/rhetoric classes may be so similar to the general education composition classes in both content and process that the need to pay closer attention is not present. That would explain why the Non-Majors' GPAs did not vary significantly either in the unmatched HT/NHT groups or in the matched HT/NHT groups. Concerning the findings related to correlation coefficients involving J-Majors' performance, grades in the initial journalism writing course are moderately related to homonym quiz performance (and statistically significant), but neither factor is a good predictor of these students' GPAs in subsequent writing classes. This may indicate that mere homonym exposure is enough to trigger the propensity to pay closer attention to writing. For Non-Majors, all combinations of correlations between the initial J-course, homonym scores, and GPAs in "after" writing classes were moderately high and statistically significant, indicating that for these students, either J-course grades or homonym scores could be used to help predict GPAs in subsequent writing courses. Conclusions Several of this study's findings show the value of long-term homonym exposure to persistent journalism majors, but the promise of a homonym key that helps unlock the brain's attention mechanism should provide hope to writing teachers at all levels and in various
Help From A Hoarse Horse Page 19
disciplines. Perhaps if homonyms were emphasized more by journalism teachers at the junior high and secondary school levels, students at those levels and later in college would be better journalistic writers. Still, this study needs to be repeated using larger sample sizes. It is possible that the effects which were noticeable but not statistically significant would be clarified if more data were available. Another suggestion is that future research include a more active approach in exposing students to homonyms, rather than merely distributing homonym lists and requiring students to prepare themselves for subsequent homonym quizzes. Even though passive exposure to homonyms seems to have an effect, more activities, such as the final week's "Homonym Heaven" experience, should be planned and executed during class time, to provide greater emphasis on paying attention. Finally, as suggested by researchers in other disciplines, use of rhetorical forms such as analogies, antonyms, and synonyms also might be worth studying as a means to improve writing skills. If paying attention is indeed a more important writing skill than previously thought, it is plausible that any exercises which promote this skill will be of value and should be examined. Help From A Hoarse Horse Page 20 References Brice, R.G. (2004, September). Connecting Oral and Written Language Through Applied Writing Strategies. Intervention in School and Clinic, 40, 38-47.
Dvorak, J. (1998, Autumn). Journalism Student Performance on Advanced Placement Exams. Journalism & Mass Communication Educator. 53, 4-12.
Dvorak, J., Lain, L., & Dickson, T. (1994). Journalism Kids Do Better: What Research Tells Us about High School Journalism. Bloomington, Indiana: ERIC Clearinghouse on Reading, English, and Communication.
Hanson, L. (1990). Computer-aided remediation for grammar, punctuation. Journalism Educator, 44(4), 43-49.
Henderson, B. (2002, Autumn). Improving Student Writing Using a Web-based Targeted Approach to Grammar System (TAGS). Journalism & Mass Communication Educator, 57, 230-243.
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