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Mary Trachsel - Institutionalizing literacy: the historical role of college entrance examinations in English

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Mary Trachsel discusses how college entrance examinations have served as an instrument for the academic institutionalization of literacy, arguing that entrance examinations chart a change of view from literacy as achievement to literacy as aptitude.Trachsel begins her study by outlining current theory on literacy. She identifies two separate approaches to the task of defining literacy: a formal approach that explains literacy as an exclusively academic activity and a functional approach that lies in basic opposition to mainstream academic values and practices.Trachsel then examines testing as an academic practice that enforces a primarily formal definition of literacy. In presenting a thorough documentation of historical developments in entrance examinations in English, she notes that while these examinations originated in academic departments of English, they have long since been taken over by bureaucratic agencies, the values and goals of which are at odds with the concept of literacy upheld by the professional community of English studies scholars and teachers.In her final chapter, Trachsel presents a critique of present-day English studies. She illustrates her critique with a historical consideration of entrance examinations in English, providing samples of actual test questions that indicate the larger ideological struggles forming the history of English studies.In voicing her concern with the ways in which the standard entrance examination movement traces the development of a professional identity for English studies specialists, Trachsel encourages all professionals in the field to devote their attention to articulating their own definition of literacy and devising a means for assessing literacy that is in accord with that definition.

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title Institutionalizing Literacy The Historical Role of College - photo 1

title:Institutionalizing Literacy : The Historical Role of College Entrance Examinations in English
author:Trachsel, Mary.
publisher:Southern Illinois University Press
isbn10 | asin:080931732X
print isbn13:9780809317325
ebook isbn13:9780585186641
language:English
subjectEnglish philology--Study and teaching--United States--History, Universities and colleges--United States--Entrance examinations--History, English philology--Examinations--History, Literacy--United States--History.
publication date:1992
lcc:PE68.U5T73 1992eb
ddc:420/.76
subject:English philology--Study and teaching--United States--History, Universities and colleges--United States--Entrance examinations--History, English philology--Examinations--History, Literacy--United States--History.
Page iii
Institutionalizing Literacy
The Historical Role of College Entrance Examinations in English
Mary Trachsel
Southern Illinois University Press
Carbondale and Edwardsville
Page iv
Copyright 1992 by the Board of Trustees,
Southern Illinois University
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
Designed by Duane E. Perkins
Production supervised by Natalia Nadraga
95 94 93 92 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Trachsel, Mary, 1953
Institutionalizing literacy : the historical role of college
entrance examinations in English / Mary Trachsel.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index.
1. English philologyStudy and teachingUnited StatesHistory.
2. Universities and collegesUnited StatesEntrance examinations
History. 3. English PhilologyExaminationsHistory.
4. LiteracyUnited StatesHistory. I. Title.
PE68.U5T73 1992
420.76dc20 91-23981
ISBN 0-8093-1732-X CIP
The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information SciencesPermanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1984. Picture 2
Page v
Contents
Preface
vii
Acknowledgments
xi
1 / Formal and Functional Definitions of Literacy
1
2 / Academic Appropriation of Literacy and the Cult of Testing
21
3 / Early Steps Toward Standardizing Literacy as a Professional Product
50
4 / Conflicts Between Literature and Composition on the Road from Achievement to Aptitude
75
5 / Objective Tests and the Construction of Literacy as Scholastic Aptitude
104
6 / Reading and Writing in the Age of Objective Testing
129
7 / Administrative Control of Academic Literacy
154
Appendix: Primary Sources Obtained from University and Testing Agency Archives
183
Bibliography
186
Index
202

Page vii
Preface
The field of composition studies has responded eagerly to a recent explosion of research and theory on the subject of literacy, invoking that body of scholarship to inform composition theory as well as pedagogy. In embracing literacy as its area of professional expertise, writing instruction stakes its claim in the very center of the academic curriculum, for as the opening sentence of Rhetoric and Reality, James Berlin's study of writing instruction in American colleges in the twentieth century, maintains, "Literacy has always and everywhere been the center of the educational enterprise" (1).
Curious as to why a concept presumably so essential to the institutional mission of the academy should be relegated almost exclusively to composition studies, a relatively disempowered segment of the discipline of English studies, I began this book as an attempt to trace the evolution of the academy's construction of literacy. In piecing together the historical development of the concept, I have focused my attention on the record of college entrance examinations, convinced that any attempt to measure or assess literacy skills must be grounded in a definition of literacy itself. What I have discovered in the process of examining those documents, along with a good bit of printed discourse surrounding their formulation and use, is a gradual but steadily intensifying cleavage of English studies as it has struggled to meet certain fundamental demands of professionalization.
On the surface, the separate disciplinary divisions resulting from this cleavage can be identified as readingor literary studieson the one hand, and writingor composition studieson the other. But as the historical narrative emerging from the pages of this book reveals, underlying the surface manifestations of disciplinary fragmentation are philosophical and traditional conflicts that constitute an intradisciplinary dialogue concerning the social and cultural mission of the American academy, the professional status of English studies and its position within the academic curriculum, and the
Page viii
influences of an increasingly corporate and bureaucratic capitalist economy on the shaping of academic disciplines.
In the early stages of the historical account offered in this book, the use of entrance examinations to define the parameters of disciplinary expertise seems obvious. The first entrance exams in English, like those of other academic departments, were produced by academic specialistsa small number of individual professors who saw the exams as a medium for the articulation of their expectations for the academic preparation in their field that would qualify an applicant as "college material." Because such exams formed the basis by which individuals could be included or excluded from the academic community and could eventually attain professional privileges, they embodied the developing professional standards by which the discipline constructed its own identity. As we well know, however, present-day college entrance apparatuses and procedures are far more complex and multifaceted, involving college placement as well as college admission decisions, and are based upon a combination of indicators elicited by nationally standardized tests in addition to examinations administered by individual institutions.
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