In my college composition teaching, I find that many of the
texts we examine speak more to one group of students than another. In
particular, I rarely find texts that speak to African and other Black
students. This is one of the reasons that I found participating in the
panel “Teaching English Using Historic Speeches by People of Color” to
be one of the most useful experiences I had at TESOL this year. The
panel, which was sponsored by the independent forum Black English
Language Professionals and Friends (BELPaF), comprised four
presentations. Mabel Asante (Borough of Manhattan Community College, New
York) focused on excerpts from the speeches of Ghana’s first president,
Kwame Nkrumah. I, Jennifer Mott-Smith, (Towson University, Maryland),
presented U.S. actor and social activist Ossie Davis’ (1973) speech
entitled The English Language is my Enemy. Mary
Romney (University of Connecticut, Storrs) focused on interviews and
speeches by Kenyan activist Wangari Maathai. And Milcah Ochieng (Madison
Area Technical College, Wisconsin) used excerpts from Barack Obama’s
(2009) U.S.-Muslim relations speech. Issues covered by the panelists
included colonization, representation, and race relations, as well as
the celebration of impressive Black historical figures.
As a genre, speeches cross the boundary between writing and
speech; they demonstrate appropriate spoken behavior in formal settings,
and they are a little-used register in language education materials.
Teaching speeches is relevant to teachers of second language writing
(SLW), particularly those working in higher education, in at least two
ways. First, teaching speeches can encourage critical thinking and lead
to sophisticated writing assignments. Second, speeches can be analyzed
as a form of rhetoric. After discussing how the panel presentations met
these objectives, I go on to discuss how one presentation might be
adapted to do so.
ENCOURAGING CRITICAL THINKING AND DEVELOPING WRITTEN ASSIGNMENTS
Most of the panelists encouraged critical thinking and
introduced writing assignments based on the speeches. Here, I discuss
only two. Dr. Asante drew on Nkrumah’s 1960 United Nations speech
addressing the recent independence and continuing colonization of
countries in Africa (in Obeng, 1997) and his 1964 remarks on the writing
of the Encyclopedia Africana (Nkrumah, n.d.). Asante
used prereading questions to stimulate the students’ thinking. For the
UN address, she asked:
- What is a colony?
- What countries do you know that were colonized?
- What are some of the responsibilities of the UN?
For the Encyclopedia address, the questions included the following:
- What is an encyclopedia?
- Have you used an encyclopedia before? What for?
- In your opinion, what qualifications should encyclopedia writers have?
After the students read the speeches, Asante asked them to use
their knowledge gained from the texts and from personal experience to
address more sophisticated questions, including the following:
- Why do groups of people fight for political autonomy?
- Do you agree with Nkrumah that only scholars of African descent should contribute to the encyclopedia?
Both sequences of activities discussed by Asante also had
research components. For the first sequence, she asked students to find
the African countries that were admitted to the United Nations in 1960.
For the second, she instructed them to write down a question about an
African country and then use the Encyclopedia
Africana to answer it. These research assignments seemed
particularly appealing because they were short and allowed for the
teaching of discrete research skills.
In my presentation, I also focused on critical thinking and
writing skills. The Davis speech provided an opportunity for students to
think deeply about the connections between language, race, and
schooling; to consider the sociopolitics of English; and to reflect on
common interests between Black English language learners and African
Americans. I gave a number of prereading questions, including the
following:
- What words do you feel have more power in your home language than in English?
- Have you ever reacted physically to someone using a dirty word?
- List all the words you can think of that refer to the idea
of “Black.” Also, list the words that you know that refer to Black
people, White people, and members of your own racial or ethnic group(s).
Then, I moved the students to responding to more sophisticated
questions in writing after reading and discussing the speech. Writing
questions included the following:
- Davis tells us that there are 44 positive synonyms for
“Whiteness” and 60 negative ones for “Blackness.” Do you think that the
negativity associated with Blackness comes from racism or somewhere
else? Does it matter?
- Write your own definition of racism and explain how it differs from that of Davis.
- Davis says, “Let us pursue truth though it hurts, though it
makes us bleed” (p. 76). What truth is he referring to? Why would it
hurt us? Discuss a truth that you know from your own experience that
hurts.
Though writing teachers have long recognized the interrelation
of teaching writing and reading, with these units, we also drew on a
less well-recognized but equally fertile relation of writing and
speaking.
SPEECHES AS A FORM OF RHETORIC
Providing numerous online resources for analysis of Obama’s
U.S.-Muslim relations speech, Dr. Ochieng focused her teaching on
analyzing effective oral argumentation. Ochieng began by identifying the
purposes of the speech, and then presented an analysis of the seven
main sources of tension covered (violent extremism, wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan, Israeli-Palestinian conflict, nuclear arms, democracy and
religious freedom, women’s rights, and economic opportunity). She went
on to present an analysis of Obama’s use of pathos to establish
credibility with his audience, including his use of Arabic, references
to the Qu’ran, use of his full name (Hussein), and his construction of
himself as “a different kind of American” through the words “a U.S.
president and an African American.”
Ochieng suggested a variety of follow-up activities that
focused the students on the speech as a rhetorical form:
- Identify and analyze persuasive techniques in President Obama’s speech.
- Identify President Obama’s argument and the evidence he uses to support it.
- Identify transitions in the speech; then, write your own speech using these transitions.
In my use of Davis’ speech, I also encouraged students to take a
rhetorical approach to the speech. Students considered contextual
questions such as
- Where is Davis giving this speech?
- What is the purpose of the gathering?
- What race of people is Davis talking to?
- Were you surprised that Davis says he has stage fright? What
reason does he give for it? Do you think race plays into it? What is
the effect of his telling us this?
I also encouraged students to examine the use of repetition as a persuasive strategy, asking:
Davis does not group his solutions together under one heading,
but rather, repeats the ideas under several headings. How does this
repetitive organizing structure promote his point?
Then, I developed a class discussion comparing Davis’ structure
with structures we had already seen in class:
How might the structure be different if Davis had written the speech as an essay for this class?
By focusing on the speeches’ rhetorical aspects, we not only
practiced the skills of rhetorical analysis but also identified
similarities and differences between speeches and writing, and modeled
successful speech-writing techniques.
ADAPTING A SPEECH UNIT FOR WRITING
Focused on the development of listening and speaking skills,
Romney’s unit perhaps would require the most adaptation for a writing
class. It opened with two engaging activities that introduced Maathai
through her winning of the Nobel Peace Prize. The first presented a list
of people and asked, “What do all these people have in common?” The
list included Kofi Annan, Jimmy Carter, Muhammad Yunus, Al Gore, Martin
Luther King, Jr., Wangari Maathai, Nelson Mandela, Rigoberta Menchú,
Barack Obama, Desmond Tutu, Oscar Arias Sánchez, and Mother Teresa.
Audience members enjoyed the challenge, and Romney happily filled in
details of the lives that were missing from our knowledge stores. The
second activity was a true/false quiz including the following
items:
- Only six African men and two African women have received the
Nobel Peace Prize since it was first awarded in 1901 (F -- Maathai was
the only African woman).
- The first Nobel Peace Prize for environment was won by Al Gore (F – He was preceded by Maathai).
- One woman is responsible for planting over 40 million trees (T -- It was Maathai).
- No woman in East or Central Africa had ever received a PhD
before the 1970s (T -- Maathai was the first in 1971).
Romney filled in the background of Maathai’s life by providing a
reading (The Green Belt Movement, n.d.). She demonstrated her use of
Maathai’s (n.d.) reading of the story “The Hummingbird,”which is a fable
with animal actors and is accessible to students from many cultures.
Romney invited the audience to listen for Maathai’s rhythm and pauses,
as she does with her students. Then, she stopped the story and
demonstrated how she instructs students to practice speaking by
generating their own story endings.
In a writing class, this unit could be adapted in a number of
ways. Because Maathai is a native Kenyan, Romney’s use of her beautiful
speech as a model in a speaking class is unusual. Thus, the issue of
accent could be discussed in class, and students could write about their
own goals or models for their speech. Students could also write rather
than speak their endings to the story, and they could extend the task by
applying the metaphor of the story to, for example, the life of
Maathai. Another adaptation would be to have students do a research
project on Maathai, the Nobel Peace Prize, or a related topic.
CONCLUSION
This panel was invigorating because it introduced teaching
materials that raise some of the most pressing issues of our times. In
my classroom, I have found that using materials that raise these issues
draws out and promotes the achievement of my African students. Moreover,
as a writing teacher, focusing on speeches as a genre provides fodder
for the development of skills in critical thinking, writing, and
rhetorical analysis. It may also be helpful for students who need to
learn to give speeches to realize that the genre shares aspects of
writing and that preparation of a successful speech is not unlike
producing a written text.
REFERENCES
Davis, O. (1973). The English language is my enemy. In R. H.
Bentley & S. D. Crawford, (Eds.), Black Language Reader(pp. 71-77). Glenview, IL: Scott, Foresman. Maathai, W. (n.d.). “The hummingbird.” Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHtFM1XEXas
Nkrumah, K. (n.d.). Speech at the opening session of the first meeting of the editorial board of the Encyclopaedia Africana. Retrieved from http://www.africawithin.com/nkrumah/encyclopedia.htm
Obama, B. (2009). Remarks by the president on a new beginning: Cairo University, Cairo Egypt. Retrieved from http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/remarks-president-cairo-university-6-04-09
Obeng, S. (1997). The selected speeches of Dr. Kwame Nkrumah. Accra, Ghana: Advanced Press Limited.
The Green Belt Movement. (n.d.). About Wangari Maathai. Retrieved from http://www.greenbeltmovement.org/w.php?id=3
Jennifer Mott-Smith is assistant professor of English
and ESOL coordinator at Towson University in Towson, Maryland, USA. She
has taught SLW at the college level for over 20 years. Her current
research interests include Chinese students’ adaptations to U.S. college
classrooms and the standardized testing of English language
learners. |