Engage with a Work of Research
ASSIGNMENT: For this essay, you will select one of the articles provided below and engage in a 2-3 page summary and response dialogue with the source. This will involve providing a detailed summary of the source’s argument and responding to that argument with your position based on the information provided in the source.
In order to foster learning and growth, all essays you submit must be newly written specifically for this course. Any recycled work will be sent back with a 0, and you will be given one attempt to redo the Touchstone
https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ1069008
https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ1188504
A. Assignment Guidelines
DIRECTIONS: Refer to the list below throughout the writing process. Do not submit your Touchstone until it meets these guidelines.
1. Article Summary
❒ Have you communicated the source’s purpose?❒ Have you included all of the source’s main points?❒ Have you restated the source’s argument in your own words?
2. Article Response
❒ Have you provided your perspective on the source’s argument?❒ Have you used specific examples from the source to illustrate why you either agree or disagree with the argument?
3. Reflection
❒ Have you answered all reflection questions thoughtfully and included insights, observations, and/or examples in all responses?
❒ Are your answers included on a separate page below the main assignment?
B. Reflection Questions
DIRECTIONS: Below your assignment, include answers to all of the following reflection questions.
- What ideas originally came to mind when you first read through the article? Did your initial response to the article change after reading it for a second time? (3-4 sentences)
- How does paying attention to the way you respond to a source help you formulate your stance on a topic? (2-3 sentences)
Example from professor is attached below
Sophia Pathways for College Credit – English Composition II
SAMPLE TOUCHSTONE AND SCORING
Nyeri Robison
Sophia Pathways
Comp II
December 4, 2019
Who’s Hooked on Stanley Fish?: An Interpretation of Reader-Response Theory
In 1980, literary scholar Stanley Fish published his famous book Is There a Text in this Class?
Most widely-read from this text is the self-titled thirteenth chapter, which is seen as one of the primary
texts that sparked what is known as ‘reader-response theory.’ This theory, some might know, is the
belief that all readers can and do make their own meanings of texts, whether those be novels, stories,
poems, plays, films, or even text-messages shared between friends. Such reader-made meanings or
‘responses’ are often separated and completely different from the intent of the text’s author; instead,
they are mostly shaped by our communities – schools and classrooms, churches and religious groups,
businesses and neighborhoods, families and friends, to list just a few examples– which offer and teach
us different strategies to interpret texts and construct meanings. In other words, there are no fixed,
objective, pre-determined textual meanings; rather we invent meanings as we encounter texts wearing
the lenses of our own histories, personal experiences, sets of knowledge, and worldviews. This rather
postmodern philosophy, however, is one that I want to challenge in part, since I believe it can work
ironically to reinforce dominant power-structures and the status quo in our society.
To understand the possible critiques of Stanley Fish’s theories, however, one must first
understand what he argues. In “Is There a Text in This Class?” Fish works to calm the fears of other
Comment [SL1]: Hi Nyeri! I’m looking forward to reading
your essay today!
Comment [SL2]: It’d be a good idea to introduce who
Stanley Fish is and why this article was written in the first
place.
Comment [SL3]: This is a good summary of the theory
presented. It would be good to lead off with what the article
touched on first, then go into more detail about the theory
that is presented.
Comment [SL4]: Great thesis statement!
Sophia Pathways for College Credit – English Composition II
SAMPLE TOUCHSTONE AND SCORING
literary scholars who think we need objective meanings in texts, standardized methods of interpreting
these meanings, and prescribed ways of teaching students those methods. They believe that these
strategies are required to prevent a fragmentation and eventual breakdown of meaning into an infinite,
disorienting cloud of unique and isolated subjective interpretations. For example, in the case of Hamlet,
what would happen if we strayed so far from Shakespeare’s intent for the play and interpreted it as
being about space aliens taking the forms of royalty in the Danish court? What if the reader (the
Subject) got too far from the text (the Object)? It is this fears that Fish tries to dismiss by proving the
whole problem is a matter of false perception. In his view, the Object and the Subject are not a binary
but rather intertwined.
Fish accomplishes this mostly by arguing that all meaning is situational and contextual and is,
in fact, created by individuals situated in specific times, places, and institutions with highly evolve,
implied systems of meaning-making. For instance, people in the United States see a car on the road and
assume that it should drive on the right side; in the United Kingdom, however, they assume the
opposite. Hence Fish tries to prove that “the opposition between objectivity and subjectivity is a false
one because neither exists in the pure form that would give the opposition its point… Rather, we have
readers whose consciousnesses are constituted by a set of conventional notions which when put into
operation constitute in turn a conventional, and conventionally seen, object” (332). Fish provides other
lengthy anecdotes of situations that have arisen within his interpretive communities, and he uses these
situations as evidence to contend that all meanings within text hinge upon and are created by context;
in other words, meaning does not exist in a vacuum. He notes that “to be in [a situation] is to ‘see’ with
the eyes of its interests, its goals, its understood practices, values, and norms, and so to be conferring
significance by seeing, not after it” (334) and that “to be in a situation is to see [words] as already
meaningful” (313). Therefore, the threat of the subjective fragmentation of meaning is not eliminated
Comment [SL5]: Yes! Good summary. I almost like your
organization better than my initial comment!
Comment [SL6]: Great summation of the paragraph. I like
how you make it into a more digestible example.
Comment [SL7]: I like how you further explain it this in
more easily digestible terms.
Sophia Pathways for College Credit – English Composition II
SAMPLE TOUCHSTONE AND SCORING
by arguing the merits of subjective, individual readings but by blasting apart the false Subject/Object
binary.
Every interpretive community, then, must necessarily makes meaning of its own accord through
the situations and systems in which they find themselves. The implications of Fish’s work transfer
outside purely literary circles, however. One can see his argument – that meaning cannot be defined
within a vacuum – as pointing criticism toward the contemporary trend in educational standardized
testing which necessitates students to make the “correct” or “objective” inference in question-scenarios
that are mainly detached from a predefined context, situation, or culture. It also has ideological
implications in calling for the deconstruction of other binaries – perhaps of gender, race, sexual
orientation, etc. – and leading all individuals to live more examined lives within our political and social
communities.
Of course, I believe in the beauty of open interpretations. After all, how else would we ever
break free from meanings that are handed down through generations and find new possible ways of
being, believing, and behaving? Nevertheless, this is where I want to raise some critiques of Fish’s
theories. Ironically enough, I think this subjective freedom can also shoots itself in the foot. First of all,
to form one’s own individual interpretation can be liberating; it can also be dangerous, solipsistic, and
nihilist. This is where Fish points us toward communities of interpretation, noting that meaning-making
is always at least a partially-collective act. Communities and cultures are comprised of many, and it is
the many that one encounters other perspectives, not just one’s own. Second, some interpretive
communities have more authority, prestige, or power than others, and we must also examine how social
institutions in areas of education, medicine, religion, and government might use their interpretations to
sustain the status quo. Resistant and oppositional readings of the messages we receive from on high
should also be heard. After all, aren’t these part of the values embedded in the mission of true
Comment [SL8]: Great use of the article to back up your
explanation!
Comment [SL9]: Good! You’re explaining your take on it
and why!
Comment [SL10]: Shoot*
Comment [SL11]: Good point. I can see why you think this
way.
Sophia Pathways for College Credit – English Composition II
SAMPLE TOUCHSTONE AND SCORING
democracies? Therefore, I believe that we should let Fish off the hook when it comes to giving the
people—and readers– the power, but we must be mindful that he comes from a position of privilege
when he so blatantly ignores how certain people will still always try to control what and how we read.
Reference
Fish, Stanley. 1980. “Is There a Text in the Class?” from Is There a Text in this Class? Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press.
Comment [SL12]: I love your concluding sentence. You’ve
explained yourself in a way that is both entertaining and
thoughtful.
Sophia Pathways for College Credit – English Composition II
SAMPLE TOUCHSTONE AND SCORING
Reflection Questions:
1. What ideas originally came to mind when you first read through the article? Did your
initial response to the article change after reading it for a second time?
At first, I just read for content. I wanted to get a feel for the article and what the author was
trying to say. Then, I read it a second time to really think about how I interpret the
information, and what my thoughts on that information were. It’s easy to read a scholarly
article like this and just settle with the idea that what the author is saying is true. It is better
to do some critical thinking while doing so, instead of turning on auto-pilot.
2. How does paying attention to the way you respond to a source help you formulate
your stance on a topic?
It really helped me understand the way that I think. I also got a chance to ask myself why I
think the way I do about the topic I’m reading about. It helps me grow as a writer, and it
helps me create a comprehensive list of reasons why I’ve taken that particular stance on the
topic.
Sophia Pathways for College Credit – English Composition II
SAMPLE TOUCHSTONE AND SCORING
Source Response Essay Rubric and Feedback
Rubric
Category
Feedback Score
(acceptable, needs
improvement etc.)
Source
Summary
You do a really nice job summarizing the article
and giving examples to help the reader
understand what it’s about. You could maybe
spend a little less energy on the summary, but it
was very thorough work.
13/15
Source
Response
There are some great ideas here! You have
added your stance to the article and what the
author is trying to get through to the learner. You
also explain why you think and react to the article
the way you do, citing examples from the text. I
would have liked to see more in terms of your
response, and less in terms of the summary.
12/15
Organization While I initially thought your organization could
use a bit more work in terms of the summary and
the response, the way you have framed your
argument works within your essay.
5/5
Style Your word choices are consistently effective. You
do a good job of avoiding redundancy and
imprecise language.
5/5
Conventions You adhere well to all of the APA formatting
requirements and your use of English
conventions is consistent throughout the
touchstone. There are minimal word errors. Well
done.
4/5
Reflection You answer all of the questions thoroughly,
providing insights, observations, and examples in
your responses. You consistently exceed the
length guidelines for your responses.
5/5
Overall Score and Feedback: 44/50
Very nice job! Your summary of this article is very thorough. Although there could
have been more to your response to the article, you’ve done a good job phrasing
your response in a way that is easily digestible.