WRITING SKILLS QUESTIONNAIRE

(taken from A Community of Writers by Peter Elbow and Pat Belanoff)

Directions: You will benefit most from this questionnaire if you fill it out three times--at the beginning, middle and end of the course. This way you'll be able to see more about what changes are taking place. (The second and third times you use this form, you may want to cover your previous answers.)

When you complete the questionnaire at the beginning of the course, fill in the left-hand column of the blanks. In the middle of the course, use the middle column and at the end of the course, use the right-hand column of blanks.

Use Y, N, and S, for "Yes," "No," and "Sometimes." If you don't know the answer--which may often happen at the start of the course--use a question mark.

ATTITUDES TOWARD WRITING

_____ _____ _____ Do you enjoy writing?
_____ _____ _____ In general do you trust yourself as a person who can find good words and ideas and perceptions?
_____ _____ _____ Do you think of yourself as a writer?

GENERATING

_____ _____ _____ On a topic of interest to you, can you generate lots of words fairly quickly and freely--not be stuck?
_____ _____ _____ Again on a topic of interest to you, can you come up with ideas or insights you'd not thought of before?
      On a topic that doesn't much interest you (perhaps an assigned topic), can you generate lots of words fairly quickly and freely--not be stuck?
      On a topic not of interest, can you come up with ideas or insights you'd not thought of before?
      On a topic where you start out not knowing what you think, can you write or think your way through to a conclusion?
      On a topic where you start out with your mind made up, can you write or think your way into actually changing your mind?

REVISING

_____ _____ _____ Can you revise in the literal sense of "resee"--thus rethink and change your mind about major things you have said?
      Can you find a main point in a mess of your disorganized writing?
      Can you find a new shape in a piece of your writing which you had previously organized?
      Can you find problems in your reasoning or logic and straighten them out?
      Can you make your sentences clear--so they are clear to readers on first reading?
      Can you get your sentences lively? Can you give them a human voice?
      Can you get rid of most mistakes in grammar, spelling, punctuation, and so on? Can you clean your writing up enough so most readers would not be put off?
      Can you get rid of virtually all such mistakes?
      Can you guess how most readers will react to something you've written?
      Can you adjust something you've written to fit the needs of particular readers?

FEEDBACK

_____ _____ _____ Can you enjoy sharing with friends a draft of what you've written?
      Can you read out loud to listeners a draft of your writing so it is really clear and "given," that is, not mumbled and "held back"?
      Can you openly listen to the reactions of a reader to your writing and try to see it as he/she sees it, even if you think his/her reactions are all wrong?
      Can you give noncritical feedback--telling the writer what you would like and summarizing or reflecting what you hear the words saying?
      Can you give "movies of your mind" as a reader--a clear story of what was happening in your mind as you were reading someone's writing?
      Can you give "criterion-based feedback"--telling the writer how the draft matches up against the most common criteria of good writing?

COLLABORATION

_____ _____ _____ Can you work on a task collaboratively with a small group; pitch in, share the work, help the group cooperate, keep the group on task?

AWARENESS AND CONTROL OF WRITING PROCESS

_____ _____ _____ Can you give a detailed account of what was going on when you were writing: the thoughts and feelings that go through your mind and the things that happen in the text?
      Do you notice problems or "stuck points" in your writing and figure out what the causes are?
      Can you make changes in the way you go about writing based on those things you noticed?
      Can you vary the way you go about writing depending on the situation: the topic, the audience, type or writing, and so on?