Teaching Writing with “A Cyborg Manifesto” Using One Conceptually Rich Common Text as the Basis for an Engaged Classroom Research/Writing Assignment
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Abstract
Historically, in NYU’s Expository Writing Program, we tend to use a pre-selected array of texts as a basis for major essay assignments, to allow students a variety of choices of style and subject matter to engage while maintaining control over the selection. Here I show how using one rich text as the foundation in a major first-semester-writing assignment is useful and interesting for teaching reading and maintaining an overall sense of cohesion and centeredness to the course, and I also demonstrate my process of asking about and exploring this particular practice. My own writing process for this piece – inductive and recursive – mirrors the process I have scaffolded for my students; my own essay – driven by idea more than thesis, structured in conversation with my idea – also mirrors the kinds of prose I encourage my students to craft. It is my hope that the culmination of the following progressive sections shows possibilities for using one foundational, rich text to teach a classroom of students to write an essay that is truly driven by inquiry rather than thesis, one that highlights the process of discovering and creating ideas and thrives in doubt.
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Pierce, A. (2025). Teaching Writing with “A Cyborg Manifesto”: Using One Conceptually Rich Common Text as the Basis for an Engaged Classroom Research/Writing Assignment. Prompt: A Journal of Academic Writing Assignments, 9(2). https://doi.org/10.31719/pjaw.v9i2.257
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