In "The Writing Revolution,"
Peg Tyre traces the problems at one troubled New York high school to a
simple fact: The students couldn't write coherent sentences. In 2009 New
Dorp High made a radical change. Instead of trying to engage students
through memoir exercises and creative assignments, the school required
them to write expository essays and diagram sentences. Within two years,
the school's pass rates for the English Regents test and the
global-history exam were soaring. The school's drop-out rate — 40
percent in 2006 — has fallen to 20 percent.
The experiment suggests that the trend toward teaching creative writing was hurting American students. In a debate about Tyre's story, we asked a range of experts, from policymakers to Freedom Writers founder Erin Gruwell, to share their thoughts on Tyre's story. (from The Atlantic)
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