|  For I must be allowed to say, that when we are employed, after a 
              proper manner, in the study of composition, we are cultivating reason 
              itself. True rhetoric and sound logic are very nearly allied. The 
              study of arranging and expressing our thought with propriety, teaches 
              to think, as well as to speak, accurately. By putting our sentiments 
              into words, we always conceive them more distinctly. Everyone who 
              has the slightest acquaintance with composition knows, that when 
              he expresses himself ill on any subject, when his arrangement is 
              loose, and his sentences become feeble, the defects of his style 
              can, almost on every occasion, be traced back to his indistinct 
              conception of the subject: so close is the connexion between thoughts, 
              and the words in which they are clothed. (952)
 
 These words, written by Hugh Blair and published in 1783, express 
              an attitude toward the study and exercise of composition that pervaded 
              the next century, and which we still embrace in ours. Good writing 
              is good thinking, and writing is necessary to education because 
              it accomplishes what other means of study do not: it reveals, more 
              glaringly than any multiple-choice exam, the writer's "indistinct 
              conception of the subject," and necessitates the forging of 
              a more distinct one. Yet somehow, this primary truth has often been 
              obscured in composition pedagogies. The connections between writing 
              and thinking, and logic and arrangement-the very crux of composition-are 
              often glossed over, to the point that John T. Gage, in his 1986 
              essay "Why Write?", felt it necessary to exhort composition 
              teachers to dare to judge between good ideas and bad ones in evaluating 
              student essays, just as they do in professional writing; and further, 
              to value good ideas over "proper" grammar and structure.
 
 All too often, the composition instructor hopes for a certain type 
              of essay-one which reveals independent thought-but teaches and even 
              evaluates with another sort of essay in mind, one where technical 
              considerations, particularly correct structure and grammatical correctness, 
              are at the fore. This split-personality evidenced in many composition 
              classrooms is encouraged by most of the composition rhetorics on 
              the market, as they teach form-such as paragraph development-while 
              offering writing models that supersede those forms; and teach the 
              application of rather rigid structures, while suggesting writing 
              assignments that encourage exploratory and independent thought, 
              which do not easily fit into such forms.
 
 In turn, this split-personality of composition handbooks and freshman 
              English rhetorics reveals a parallel split in contemporary composition 
              theory, which is symptomatic of an incomplete break from current-traditional 
              rhetoric, at least in the instructional advice that many contemporary 
              freshman rhetorics and handbooks offer. Current-traditional rhetoric, 
              developed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, can be defined 
              as an approach to teaching composition that emphasizes prescripts 
              of structure and style. As such, current-rhetorical theory is widely 
              criticized as a pedagogy that encourages the separation of form 
              from content. James A. Berlin calls current-traditional rhetoric 
              "the manifestation of the assembly line in education" 
              and "the triumph of the scientific and technical world view" 
              (62).
 
 In this essay, I will attempt to consider the cultural, historical, 
              philosophical, and practical forces that have kept the current-traditional 
              approach entrenched in the composition classroom, and to propose 
              the need to reexamine paragraph theory in two contexts. First, we 
              need to question how the prevailing paragraph pedagogy affects student 
              writing, and second, we need to examine its effects on how society 
              at large considers the act of and purposes for writing. For if we 
              believe that the development of ideas progresses within the language 
              act, then composition must take on a much more central educational 
              role throughout the various disciplines; and if composition is to 
              do so, we must reconsider how to teach it, on a practical as well 
              as an ideological level. Finally, I intend to suggest that in an 
              age immersed in Thomas Kuhn and Nietzche, it is pedagogically irresponsible, 
              rather absurd, and counter to our educational goals to continue 
              to follow a pedagogical approach that distinguishes form from thought, 
              and which reduces writing instruction to set formulas and matters 
              of superficial correctness.
 Bain's 
              Paragraphing Rules in the Classroom
 The development of current-traditional rhetoric, as well as the 
              reactions against it, can be framed by the history of paragraph 
              theory. When a writing instructor turns to that part of most freshman 
              composition rhetorics or handbooks that deal with essay structure, 
              she finds that the architecture of the paragraph holds a prominent 
              place; in fact, the composition is commonly conceived of as a structure 
              of paragraphs. The paragraphing rules set forth in such textbooks 
              are in most cases very much like those formulated by Alexander Bain 
              in his 1866 text, English Composition and Rhetoric, which conceived 
              of the paragraph as a rhetorical structure with fixed requirements 
              (Lewis 20). His rules have become so entrenched in our understanding 
              of paragraph and essay structure that it is surprising to realize 
              that the paragraph was not a subject of any detailed rhetorical 
              consideration until Bain. Bain's rules have become our rules, and 
              most contemporary freshman rhetorics restate them in more or less 
              the same fashion.
 
 Bain conceived of the paragraph's structure as analogous to the 
              sentence. He likened the topic sentence to main clause, asserting 
              that "[t]he opening sentence, unless so constructed as to be 
              obviously preparatory, is expected to indicate with prominence the 
              subject of the paragraph." The other sentences are conceived 
              of in analogy to subordinate elements, and serve to flesh out the 
              meaning of the topic sentence. Furthermore, Bain asserted that the 
              paragraph is also characterized by three features, coherence, unity 
              and development. Bain spent the most ink on the subject of coherence, 
              taking care to list the various conjunctions and connectives that 
              can be used to show the relationships between the clauses and sentences 
              within the paragraph; and emphasizing the importance of parallel 
              structure in sentences that illustrate the same idea. Unity, "which 
              implies a definite purpose, and forbids digressions and irrelevant 
              matter," is another prominent consideration. The third is development 
              (which subsequent current-traditionalists renamed mass or proportion), 
              meaning that the paragraph topic is expanded upon sufficiently to 
              satisfy the reader, and the mass of the paragraph is in proportion 
              to its importance to the composition's overall purpose.
 
 Yet if we perceive the paragraph rules we encounter in our rhetorics 
              as as self-evident as gravity, the evidence of many composition 
              theorists since the 1960s shows that our sense of paragraph theory 
              is a bit confused-Bain did not discover some inevitable laws of 
              the paragraph. Instead, he prescribed a particular style of paragraphing, 
              which proceeds deductively. Bain's rules went virtually unquestioned 
              for a century, until a number of composition theorists investigated 
              the actual English paragraph, and discovered that professional essayists 
              have transgressed Bain's standards to excellent effect, both before 
              and since 1866.1 At the most extreme, Richard Braddock concluded 
              that paragraphs beginning with topic sentences were surprisingly 
              rare in professional contemporary expository prose-comprising only 
              13 percent of paragraphs he examined. William Irmscher's graduate 
              students repeated Braddock's investigations and found topic-led 
              paragraphs to be more common, between 40 and 50 percent, although 
              their frequency varied among individual writers (Irmscher 98). A.L. 
              Becker identified a variety of paragraph patterns beyond Bain's 
              topic-led one.2
 
 With some exceptions, the majority of composition theorists since 
              the 1960s have viewed Bain's highly teachable prescriptions as actually 
              detrimental to the development of student writing. The title of 
              Virginia M. Burke's 1967 essay, "The Paragraph: Dancer in Chains," 
              says it all. For Burke, the current-traditional rhetoricians are 
              very like the critics that Fielding criticized in Tom Jones: "men 
              of shallow capacities" who "mistake mere form for substance" 
              (Burke 37). Philosophically, the new rhetoricians object to the 
              current-traditionalist's division of form and thought. As James 
              A. Berlin encapsulates their theoretical stance, "[s]tructure 
              and language are a part of the very formation of meaning; they are 
              at the center of the discovery of truth and are not simply the dress 
              of thought" (91). Or, as John T. Gage asserts,
 
 The forms cannot be given to students, whose task is then to fill 
              them up with ideas, since in such cases the ideas will not have 
              a purpose in themselves other than to satisfy the demand of the 
              form. It is ideas which come first, in writing, and forms which 
              satisfy the demands that face a writer who has them. (729)
 
 If your freshman composition classes are anything like the ones 
              I have taught, your students are not particularly inspired, or helped, 
              by the current-traditional explanation of the paragraph. Usually 
              such advice elicits groans-or worse-glazed-over eyes. It's no wonder: 
              they've had this advice drilled into them since grade school. Most 
              of them are competent at this structure, but it doesn't seem to 
              be helping them to fulfill that part of your assignment that asks 
              them to deal with a thought-provoking issue, to consider something 
              in a new light, to consider an unfamiliar concept. In other words, 
              to think, for God's sake.
 
 First of all, there's the rather embarrassing fact that the model 
              essays that we encourage our students to study and emulate do not 
              always follow the paragraph prescriptions we teach. Further, our 
              paragraph prescriptions, which seem so concise on the page, become 
              problematic when put into practice. The paragraph is supposed to 
              confine itself to one main idea, but so is the essay, the sentence, 
              and even the word. Upon close examination, it's very difficult to 
              ascertain exactly what an "idea" is, as many critics of 
              current-traditional paragraphing rules have pointed out. Paul C. 
              Rodgers Jr., in his 1966 essay, "A Discourse-Centered Rhetoric 
              of the Paragraph," listed the amendments that have been made 
              to Bain's rules, based on the study of the paragraph as it is actually 
              written:
 
 --A proper paragraph always has a single central topic idea, except 
              when it has two, three, or more.
 --Development of the topic is always limited to the paragraph in 
              which the topic is broached, except when the topic requires that 
              exposition continue in the next.
 --The topic sentence always expresses the topic idea, but the work 
              of expression may be disposed of in a minor segment of the sentence; 
              or, on the other hand, a complicated topic may take several sentences, 
              and these sentences may be widely separated in the paragraph.
 --There is always a topic sentence, yet it may not actually be stated. 
              In this case, it is "implied," and serves as a sort of 
              offstage influence directing the action in the paragraph.
 --A paragraph by definition is a series of sentences, but now and 
              then it turns out to be one sentence only. If the sentences-series 
              seems too long for presentation as a unit, it can be subdivided 
              into several paragraphs without loss of unity. Conversely, a series 
              of short paragraphs can be combined into a single unit, sometimes 
              with the original components identified by number or letter.
 --Moreover there are certain very useful and common paragraph types 
              that show little interest in amplifying topics: transitional, introductory, 
              directive, summary, and concluding paragraphs. (40)
 
 Such exceptions render paragraph rules absurd, and point to the 
              fact that the paragraph is a much more flexible structure than freshman 
              composition texts tend to admit. In fact, it is rather odd that 
              although the paragraph is a much more complex unit than the sentence, 
              current-traditional rhetoric defines it by more rigid prescriptions. 
              It is perhaps even odder that it took a century for rhetoricians 
              to question the validity of Bain's prescriptions, and I suspect 
              that the reason for this oddity can be found in the current-traditionalist's 
              implicit attitude toward both audience and invention, both of which 
              are formally defined to a large extent by the insistence on a topic-led 
              paragraph.
 
 When Bain likened the paragraph to the sentence, he was thinking 
              of a specific type: the loose sentence. Just as the loose sentence 
              begins with the main clause, which is supported by subordinate elements 
              that follow, Bain's description of the paragraph begins with the 
              main idea, which controls the paragraph. Such a structure, on both 
              the sentence and the paragraph level, can be labeled deductive, 
              or analytical. Rhetorically, the deductive form, whether on the 
              sentence or paragraph level, implies an expectation that the audience 
              will readily accept the idea proposed at its most general level 
              (the topic sentence). If the audience is expected to resist one's 
              conclusions or generalities, the composer will proceed inductively, 
              or synthetically; that is, she will take care to begin at a lower 
              level of generality, offering reasons for her conclusions before 
              she states them. Thus the deductive paragraph is useful in rhetorical 
              situations wherein the composer need not consider audience resistance.
 
 In addition, the deductive quality of the current-traditional paragraph 
              model poses some problems when we ask our students to use their 
              writing as an occasion to think through ideas. We think inductively, 
              proceeding from the particulars to a generalized conclusion. We 
              explain deductively, or analytically, and the ability to present 
              an idea deductively presupposes a good deal of inductive thinking, 
              which is undertaken in the invention phase. In an attempt to resurrect 
              invention in the composition classroom, process theorists emphasize 
              such invention heuristics as brainstorming and freewriting, as well 
              as dialogue between students and instructors. But invention goes 
              beyond pre-writing strategies, continuing throughout multiple drafts, 
              and the writing process itself is seen as an inventive act.
 
 For a process pedagogue, writing in the classroom is primarily exploratory 
              rather than explanatory. Bringing a concept to distinctness is the 
              work of writing, at least according to Gage, William Irmscher and 
              others who have opposed the competency model, and writing can be 
              used to this end more effectively than other means because, by the 
              very nature of the writing act, thoughts are slowed, examined, and 
              reassessed in a way that they rarely are otherwise, either in conversation 
              or in our own internal thoughts. The act of writing forces us to 
              slow down and examine our ideas, test them for validity and logical 
              connections to other ideas. As Irmscher noted in 1979, some two 
              hundred years after Blair but in perfect concord, "Because 
              writing is so much more deliberative than talking, it helps us determine 
              what we know and what we don't know. In our minds, we can fool ourselves. 
              Not on paper. [. . .] Mental fuzziness translates into words only 
              as fuzziness or meaninglessness." (20)
 
 Thus for the process pedagogue, the real work of invention occurs 
              in the actual composition, not before it, and fuzzy thought on the 
              page is often the beginning of independent thought, simply because 
              of a natural desire to understand what we are forced to acknowledge 
              that we don't yet understand. Well developed, original and logically 
              structured writing rarely springs full-formed onto the page, unless 
              the ideas that inform it have come pre-packaged from without. Most 
              commonly, it requires a great deal of work to develop a germ of 
              a thought to its final fruition, and that work will proceed inductively, 
              from particulars that lead up to a conclusion.
 
 In the contemporary composition handbook, process pedagogy has found 
              its place, listed under such titles as "pre-writing," 
              or "generating" or "discovering" ideas, but 
              the inquiry-led nature of process pedagogy is not carried into the 
              drafting of the paper. Instead, drafting is still characteristically 
              taught using the current-traditional model. The Bainian paragraph 
              is the standard and the basis of the total form, which is often 
              taught as a structure of paragraphs which, like the paragraph itself, 
              proceeds deductively. As a consequence, despite our hope that our 
              students will think synthetically, we expect them to draft analytically.
 
 This is fine as far as it goes, for the essay should often proceed 
              from inductive inquiry in early drafts to deductive presentation 
              in the final product. However, the bottom line is that the final 
              product, the essay turned in for a grade, and even the rough drafts, 
              are often evaluated primarily by their success in deductive presentation, 
              as well as by their adherence to grammatical and usage norms on 
              the sentence level. Because these are the evaluation priorities, 
              they are what count for the student. As long as structure and form 
              are dominant considerations in the evaluation of papers, we cannot 
              expect our students to value the quality of their content, and thus 
              to see composition as an exercise of independent thought and inventiveness. 
              We ask one thing, but grade another. We dutifully reward the dull, 
              predictable paper with a decent grade, noting that it is coherent 
              in purpose, with a clear thesis statement and paragraphs that begin 
              with topic sentences and demonstrate unity, coherence and proportion, 
              more or less.
 
 Unfortunately, in a classroom informed by the competency model, 
              the work of developing a germinal thought to its fruition is often 
              never undertaken. This is the danger that Gage expressed well in 
              his criticism of the competency model, and which any number of writing 
              instructors can relate to in trying to encourage students to explore 
              and clarify their ideas.
 
 [I]f students have been taught to view success on such assignments 
              as fulfillment of the technical requirements, however these may 
              be defined, then it will no doubt occur to them that the best way 
              to ensure success is to keep the ideas as simple and meaningless 
              as possible. If successful writing is defined as technical skills 
              only, then students may be learning an unspoken lesson that is unintended 
              by the pedagogy, namely, that ideas do not matter. (721)
 
 If an instructor notes that a paragraph is unclear, illogical, or 
              undeveloped, the student can do one of two things: develop and clarify 
              it, or cut it. With the pressure of a deadline and an imminent grade, 
              the student more often than not chooses the latter path, and more 
              than a bad paragraph is at stake. Students prefer simple and relatively 
              meaningless ideas because they are relatively easy to explicate 
              in a coherent, well-structured form; a complex idea, after all, 
              can make a linear pattern of thought-and of writing-difficult, or 
              even impossible, to attain. A complex idea, if pursued, could necessitate 
              a divergence from the thesis statement as originally conceived. 
              An unclear, undeveloped or illogical paragraph is sometimes more 
              than a sign of improper structure, or a call to return to the topics 
              or modes to develop it; such a paragraph can be a sign that the 
              thinking that has prompted the act of writing needs to be reconsidered. 
              In other words, as Blair noted, loose arrangement is a sign of indistinct 
              conception. The question is, are we as writing instructors making 
              clear that the real work of writing is to bring concepts to clarity?
 The 
              Historical Context
 No doubt we judge professional writing primarily by the quality 
              of thought behind it, and agree with Blair that rhetoric and logic 
              are inextricable. How have we gotten to a place where writers such 
              as Gage feel it necessary to suggest that we make the same judgments 
              concerning our students' compositions? For Gage, as for Blair, the 
              tantamount skill learned in writing is the skill of thinking. Writing 
              instruction is valued because it develops independent thought, or 
              as Gage dares to call it, philosophy, or rhetoric in the Aristotelian 
              sense-that is, the discovery of good reasons in situations where 
              conclusions can never be more than provisional. Where did we get 
              off track, to the point that we often fail to make the connection 
              between good writing and good thinking; and to the point that university 
              administrators, students, and even composition instructors believe 
              that in the course of one or two composition classes, students will 
              have "gotten" writing, that writing is a skill akin to 
              following a cooking recipe?
 
 Bain's rules persist because they imply that learning to write is 
              much like following a recipe, and also because the conditions that 
              ushered in their acceptance are still in place. An investigation 
              into the pressures that came to bear on the American university 
              in the late 19th century can help to explain why Bain's paragraphing 
              rules came to be seen as undisputed truth, despite all evidence 
              to the contrary in actual writing samples; and can help us to better 
              see our own situation.
 
 Bain's students in Aberdeen, Scotland, were not especially well 
              read, many came from rural areas, and many spoke in nonstandard 
              dialects; and perhaps the most immediately obvious reason that Bain's 
              theories took hold on American soil was that he had developed easily 
              teachable, prescriptive lessons in essay structure. Bain designed 
              his rhetoric in order to quickly bring poorly educated students 
              up to a writing competency standard (Ferreira-Buckley and Horner 
              200). In America, universities were increasingly challenged with 
              just such students. Following the American Civil War, enrollment 
              in the nation's universities mushroomed, and universities were increasingly 
              serving not just an elite student body whose classical education 
              could be assumed, but a rapidly growing population of students who 
              aspired to join the middle class. Many of these students possessed 
              little in the way of classical education or practice in composition. 
              Composition had formerly been guided by the rhetoricians of the 
              late 18th and early 19th century, including Hugh Blair, George Campbell 
              and Richard Whately, whose tenants were derived from classical rhetoric 
              and assumed an education steeped in the classics. The American universities 
              of the late 19th century needed to find another way. For these students, 
              the study of Blair's belletristic rhetoric was untenable, and universities 
              were responding to the needs of their students by developing English 
              departments that could not only emphasize English literature, but 
              answer to the needs of a student body largely unschooled in the 
              classics.
 
 Consequently, nascent English departments were faced with a sharply 
              rising student body-all in need of composition instruction, but 
              essentially unequipped with the intellectual and literary background 
              which had formerly been assumed. The student-teacher ratio was crushing. 
              For example, in 1894 the University of Michigan's English department 
              served nearly 1,200 composition students with four faculty members 
              and two graduate students. The student-teacher ratio in Harvard's 
              composition courses was 100 students per teacher (Berlin 60)-somewhat 
              more manageable, but as those of us who have attempted to attend 
              to the compositions of 100 students can attest, still extremely 
              taxing. Clearly composition could not be taught on a student by 
              student basis, and some form of pragmatic and time-efficient basis 
              for evaluating student writing needed to be employed.
 
 Doubtless, interest in the paragraph in composition theory also 
              coincided with a large-scale shift from oral readings in the classroom 
              to silent reading, and concomitantly, from composition as intended 
              for oratory to writing intended mainly for the page, all made possible 
              by increasingly available and affordable writing tools and books. 
              Bain was innovative in developing a rhetorical model that answered 
              to needs of a textual, as opposed to an oral, rhetoric (Corbett 
              and Conners 525). Although paragraphing as evidenced by indentation 
              has been found in manuscripts dating as far back as the sixth century,3 
              a need for a theory that could govern paragraph development was 
              not perceived until the emphasis in composition shifted toward silent 
              reading. That is, as compositions were more frequently received 
              by the eye instead of the ear, the appearance of text on the page 
              increased in importance. An extremely long paragraph could make 
              a reader hesitate to plunge in, even if the same discourse might 
              not spark the same foreboding if presented orally.
 
 While composition shifted away from an emphasis on oratory, the 
              mid-19th century American university was also experiencing a major 
              transformation in educational purpose, as James Berlin has emphasized. 
              Prior to the Civil War, American universities had been dominated 
              by clergymen, who taught rhetoric as a central component in the 
              education of future clergy and an elite class expected to hold political 
              power. The major figures in rhetoric through the late 18th and early 
              to mid-19th centuries, including Hugh Blair, George Campbell and 
              Richard Whately, were clergymen, all of whom adapted classical rhetoric 
              to the requirements of moral leadership and the development of refined 
              taste. A central task of education was to develop the art of oratory, 
              as it would be used to inspire and instruct from the pulpit and 
              to persuade in the political realm.
 
 The centrality of classical rhetoric was gradually displaced as 
              universities increasingly responded to the practical needs of a 
              burgeoning industry. Education was opening up to all members of 
              society, and the majority of new students were not interested in 
              becoming clergymen. Neither were they preparing for political leadership, 
              as were the elite students of the early 19th century. Instead, they 
              were seeking entrance into the middle class through careers in industry 
              and agriculture, and their interests were decidedly secular. In 
              response to the needs of such students, American universities adopted 
              the German model of education, wherein scientific and technological 
              information took precedence over religious and moral concerns.
 
 The aims of composition shifted as a result. When composition was 
              geared to the clergy, all the elements of classical rhetoric came 
              into play, as emotional and ethical appeals were as important as 
              logical ones. The purpose of oratory was persuasion. The rhetoric 
              of the late 19th century, as it pertained to composition classrooms, 
              had no need for all of that. Sharon Crowley notes that consideration 
              of arrangement in classical rhetoric in large part ensues from the 
              need to persuade an audience, and the skill in this arrangement 
              lies in predicting the audience's attitude toward the message. The 
              emotional disposition of the audience was one of utmost importance, 
              and the composer shaped his discourse to appeal to the emotions 
              and ethics of his audience, as well as to logic.
 
 This is an essential point, because Aristotle's rhetoric, and classical 
              rhetoric after him, dealt only in probable truths, for these are 
              the ones that cannot be demonstrated beyond refutation. The realm 
              of rhetoric, as it was classically defined, concerned how humans 
              should act in a situation that presents alternative possibilities; 
              and the purpose of rhetoric, in Aristotle's model, was for the composer 
              to discover the best possible reasons for provisional actions, and 
              to persuade his audience to accept his point of view. However, the 
              rhetoric developed by the current-traditionalists was not interested 
              in probabilities, for the subjects of compositions were perceived 
              as essentially factual; and the goal of the writer was not to persuade 
              her reader to any provisional conclusions, where other conclusions 
              could be countered. Crowley notes that this had a marked effect 
              on the tone, and arrangement, of the compositions written in the 
              current-traditional classroom, both of which arose from its pedagogical 
              attitude toward the audience:
 
 Current-traditional discourse theory [. . .] painted listeners and 
              readers as curiously docile. They were never hostile or inattentive-they 
              were just interested. Writers needed only to arrange their discourse, 
              then, in a fashion that would ease the reading process-that would, 
              in fact, reflect the way any reasonable person might have written 
              it, according to the natural dictates of the rational mind. (267)
 
 Arrangement in such a situation is deductive, and easily managed 
              by rigid formulas. The writer is not seeking to convince her audience 
              of her conclusions, or seeking to prompt her audience to a particular 
              course of action in the moral or political spheres. She is not encouraging 
              her audience to follow the train of thought that would lead to these 
              conclusions, and is expecting no resistance, no alternative possibilities. 
              She is merely arranging and reporting preconceived, unassailable 
              facts, by the most efficient means possible, to an interested audience 
              in need of instruction. In such a writing situation, consideration 
              of audience shrinks considerably, with the main consideration becoming 
              the reader's knowledge base, which indicates the level of explanation 
              required in the composition. The expectations and requirements of 
              an educational system geared toward science, technology and business 
              encouraged a composition based on reporting. As Berlin notes, composition 
              topics assigned during the late 19th century encouraged a composition 
              based on "either close observation, in the scientific sense, 
              or the use of research material, the thinking of others. In both 
              cases, the student was asked to report on [. . .] either empirical 
              data or the work of better observers than he himself" (68).
 
 Neither Bain, nor the modern-traditional school as it developed 
              in American colleges, had much to say about invention. For Blair, 
              invention presupposed and involved a protracted intellectual inquiry 
              guided by belles lettres-for which the student preparing for a practical 
              career serving industry had little need. Corbett and Conners suggest 
              that the neglect of invention in composition was a "conscious 
              move away from the complex or mechanical invention systems that 
              were a necessary part of trying to use the old abstract rhetorical 
              assignments in a world where wide reading-especially in the classics-could 
              no longer be assumed" (525). While invention, as well as attendance 
              to audience response, was of great significance to students of theology, 
              it was simply unnecessary to students preparing for careers in business 
              or technology. The conclusions that formed the outline of their 
              compositions had been developed for them, in the scientific inquiries 
              that had coalesced into unquestionable dogma, or in the equally 
              unquestionable cultural assumptions that prevailed in the middle 
              class, to which they aspired. Essentially, the work of invention 
              was outside of their area of responsibility, and the worth of their 
              composition rested in large part on their comprehension of and assent 
              to the conclusions of their culture, whether received from the scientific 
              textbook, the political speech, or the pulpit. If, as Crowley notes, 
              the reader was assumed to be docile and merely interested, the writer 
              was expected to be so also.
 
 In such a writing situation, the paragraph as described by Bain, 
              with its unwaveringly deductive logic, could easily be construed 
              as the superior, and even the only, form for the paragraph. To ease 
              comprehension, and to facilitate quick reading, the paragraph must 
              begin with the declaration of the main fact, which is then clarified 
              by one or more of the modes. The flow of attention in such a paragraph, 
              from the conclusion in its generality to the specifics leading to 
              that conclusion, meets the criteria for the expository essay designed 
              to inform. Issues of audience and invention proved largely unnecessary 
              to the student of current-traditional pedagogy. Both the reader's 
              and the writer's attitudes toward the material for the composition 
              were largely a moot point, as the content was unassailably true, 
              as long as it aligned with the accepted scientific fact and middle-class 
              moral norm. As Berlin puts it, composition was reduced to technical 
              writing (63).
 
 Rules of paragraphing flourished as a primary rhetorical focus under 
              these conditions, and Bain's prescripts were adapted in America, 
              most prominently by John Genung of Amherst College and A.S. Hill 
              and Barrett Wendell of Harvard, forefathers of the current-traditional 
              approach to writing instruction. All the factors discussed above 
              paved the way for current-traditional paragraph theory, but their 
              practical necessity was perhaps most obviously caused by the Harvard 
              Reports of the 1890s, the first of a continual wave of "why 
              Johnny can't write" studies that persist to this day.
 
 Beginning in 1891, the writing abilities of Harvard's incoming freshmen 
              were investigated by a committee of three men unschooled and inexperienced 
              in writing instruction, Charles Francis Adams, E.L. Godkin, and 
              Josiah Quincy. Under the direction of this committee, Harvard's 
              composition instructors assigned their students themes concerning 
              their preparatory school training in composition. The committee 
              read these students' essays, as well as freshmen entrance exams, 
              and concluded that students were coming into Harvard with poor writing 
              skills. The fault, and responsibility, was laid on preparatory schools; 
              as a result, entrance requirements related to writing skills stiffened 
              at Harvard and at colleges across the country, and secondary schools 
              began to take English composition more seriously. As Berlin notes, 
              the Harvard Reports were beneficial in that preparatory schools 
              began to take writing skills more seriously; on the other hand, 
              the criteria used in deciding the value of compositions tended to 
              accentuate details of style, increasingly construed as matters of 
              superficial correctness, rather than content. (61). Bain's rules 
              had laid out a clear rubric by which structure could be identified 
              nearly as easily as a comma splice.
 
 In investigating the ascendancy of the paragraph as the significant 
              unit of composition structure, one cannot omit mention of Paragraph-Writing 
              (1891), written by Fred Newton Scott of the University of Michigan 
              and Joseph V. Denney of Ohio State University. Answering to the 
              pressures of an overburdened faculty and generally unskilled student 
              body, this text proposed the practice of composition through the 
              writing of paragraphs, and thus encouraged the concept of the paragraph 
              as something very close to a mini-composition. Between 1900 and 
              1930, according to Corbett and Conners (535), over 90 percent of 
              textbooks used some version of the paragraphing theories developed 
              by Scott and Denney. Given the practical conditions of the time, 
              it is not surprising that Paragraph-Writing proved to be seminal: 
              the paragraph was easier for the beginning writer to handle, and 
              easier for the instructor to grade.
 Some 
              Alternative Voices
 To assert the above is an unfortunate and misleading oversimplification 
              of Scott's contribution to composition pedagogy-contributions that 
              were largely ignored as current-traditional pedagogy took hold. 
              While Scott doubtless saw the exercise of writing paragraphs as 
              a lightening of the burden of teaching composition, and thus presented 
              the paragraph as a discrete unit of discourse, he emphasized the 
              development of the paragraph in the context of the entire essay; 
              and of the essay in context to the rhetorical situation. Paragraph-Writing 
              encouraged the student writer to experiment with options in developing 
              paragraphs-options guided by the content which the writer intended 
              to express and the context of that expression.
 
 As such, Scott's paragraph theory is strikingly similar to those 
              proposed by process theorists during the 1960s, when such writers 
              as A.L. Becker and Paul C. Rodgers, Jr., first challenged the current-traditional 
              concept of the paragraph with significant force. Like the process 
              theories, and unlike Bain and the current-traditionalists, Scott 
              saw form as inseparable from content, and subordinate to the rhetorical 
              situation of the moment. William Irmscher expresses the difference 
              between process and current-traditional concepts of arrangement 
              thus: "we discover as we write; it means that the writer writes 
              more like a sculptor who finds form while sculpting than like a 
              bricklayer who piles bricks to construct a wall" (99); in looking 
              at Scott's concept of the paragraph, it is clear that he would agree 
              with the first analogy rather than the second.
 
 Scott's paragraph theory thus holds strong affinities to the tagmemic 
              concept of the paragraph, as developed by Becker, Kenneth L. Pike, 
              and Richard Young, who also understood paragraphing in terms of 
              the larger rhetorical situation. In tagmemic theory, any behavior 
              needs to be examined from three perspectives: as a discrete unit 
              of behavior, or particle; as part of an unsegmentable flow, or wave; 
              and in context to the surrounding situation, or field. Tagmemic 
              analysis reveals that the paragraph cannot be considered merely 
              in its existence as a particle, or unit, as current-traditional 
              theory tends to do. The paragraph also needs to be considered in 
              the context of the larger situation, both the essay and the larger 
              communication-situation that prompted it. In doing so, the relationship 
              between form and meaning is respected, and Becker expresses the 
              significance of this approach: "this means that a whole is 
              not the sum of its parts (if by 'parts' we mean only the isolated 
              segments), but only of its parts plus their relationships" 
              (33).
 
 Scott's analysis was also very like Rodgers' theory of "stadia 
              of discourse," or semantic structures that can operate independently 
              of paragraph indentation. In fact, regarding Rodgers' stadia theory, 
              affinity is too weak a word, as Scott had identified such stadia 
              by nearly the exact definition, and for the exact reasons, that 
              Rodgers did some 70 years later.4 Both Rodgers and Scott viewed 
              the paragraph as it was originally conceived, as a punctuation device 
              more emphatic than the period, but which, like the period, can be 
              inserted in a variety of places within the flow of the discourse. 
              The decision to punctuate with a period is not dictated by grammatical 
              mechanics, as a writer may choose to group any number of ideas within 
              a sentence by means of coordinate and subordinate clauses, and in 
              doing so interprets that group of ideas as unified. So it is with 
              paragraphing. Rodgers stated that the paragraph works, "as 
              does all punctuation, as a gloss upon the overall literary process 
              [. . .]. To compose is to create; to indent is to interpret" 
              (43), and we might add that all punctuation fulfills a rhetorical 
              role of interpretation, aside from its grammatical role. Both Rodgers 
              and Scott perceived the essay as a flow of thought, which is interrupted 
              at certain points through paragraphing in order to signal what Rodgers 
              called "a noteworthy break in the flow of discourse" (41), 
              and which Scott explained thus:
 
 The essay is the result of a sustained movement of the writer's 
              thought toward a definite goal, but within this large development 
              several intermediate steps are discoverable. The thought, on its 
              way to the main conclusion, passes through many stages of transition, 
              attains many minor conclusions, pauses for many retrospective glances. 
              (28) (italics mine)
 
 I italicize "discoverable" in this quote because, for 
              Scott, segmentation of the flow of discourse through paragraphing 
              is not governed by the discourse itself, any more than the decision 
              to end a sentence is necessarily governed by the end of one idea 
              and the beginning of another. The writer discovers where he wants 
              to indent, given his interpretation of the level of import of each 
              stadium of thought, just as an orator pauses in order to emphasize 
              a point he considers especially cogent to his larger intentions. 
              That is, he wishes to give certain ideas emphasis over others, and 
              this decision is not always based on any logical necessities in 
              dividing ideas into discrete units, as Bain and his followers would 
              have it, but rather on the importance of the content within it, 
              as it pertains to the purposes of the larger composition. Thus Rodgers 
              reaches this conclusion:
 About all we can usefully say of all paragraphs at present is that 
              their authors have marked them off for special consideration as 
              stadia of discourse, in preference to other stadia, other patterns, 
              in the same material. "At this point," the writer tells 
              us with his indentation, "a major stadium of discourse has 
              just been completed. Rest of a moment, recollect and consider, before 
              the next begins." But his decision to indent may be taken for 
              any one (or more) of at least half a dozen different reasons. (42)
 
 Thus the function of the paragraph is to signal what both Scott 
              and Rodgers termed "stadia" of discourse, but as both 
              noted, these stadia do not necessarily correspond to indentation. 
              As Rodgers noted, the reasons to indent are manifold, and can be 
              located outside of the decision to mark prose with paragraphing 
              according to the logical laws of a "unified idea." They 
              can be guided by the physical requirements of a print-era rhetoric, 
              such as the need to break up a long unit of discourse into shorter 
              paragraphs to satisfy the reader's eye, who might be put off by 
              the sight of a long paragraph; or alternatively, a number of short 
              stadia might be grouped into one paragraph, in order to prevent 
              the development from appearing anemic. Rythmic considerations may 
              also prompt an author to indent, as may shifts in tone. In addition, 
              Rodgers definition makes clear the original concept of the paragraph 
              mark as it appears in Greek manuscript-a mark intended to show closure, 
              a place to pause, rather than a beginning.5
 
 Scott made clear that paragraphing is used to mark the closure of 
              "intermediate steps" within the flow of thought (which 
              he also referred to as "natural articulations"). However, 
              as did Rodgers, he also noted that "[t]he mechanical paragraphing 
              does not always represent every joint in the structure of the essay" 
              (28). It is up to the writer to decide just which "joints" 
              he wishes to accentuate by indentation, just as it is up to the 
              orator to decide when to accentuate a point by a changing his intonation 
              or pausing for emphasis. Scott illustrated the paragraphing options 
              open to the writer with the following diagram and explanation:
 ______________________________________
 (will 
              place diagram here)______________________________________
 
 A, B, and C here represent the more important stadia of the developing 
              thought, the small letters, the partial conclusions. The vincula 
              above show the three methods of paragraphing. Many variations of 
              the third method might of course be adopted, according to the kind 
              of discourse and the varying degrees of subordination of the minor 
              articulations. (29)
 
 This examination of the discourse stadium reveals the nature of 
              the paragraph as more than a discrete unit that can be analyzed 
              via "some Procrustean formula for governing the behavior of 
              sentences between breaks, and to insist upon applying it over and 
              over again throughout written discourse," to quote Rodgers' 
              assessment of Bain's paragraphing rules (41). Instead, the paragraph 
              is developed according to the needs of the larger composition, or 
              as Scott expressed it, "[i]t is the business of the paragraph, 
              as a section of the essay, to develop a specific subject by bringing 
              particular facts into their due relation to the theme of the whole 
              essay" (29).
 
 Ironically, although Paragraph-Writing served to cement the current-traditionalist 
              curriculum, Scott can be seen as a forebear of the process view 
              of composition. As one of the founders of the National Council of 
              Teachers of English (NCTE) in 1911, Scott fought against the practice 
              of issuing entrance exams, which had been enacted as a result of 
              the Harvard Reports; and criticized the rigid pedagogies that such 
              exams encouraged, insisting that an emphasis on error-hunting and 
              technical competency elevates matters that are subsidiary to the 
              central role of composition. Unlike the current-traditionalists, 
              who saw technical correctness as the litmus test for middle class 
              status, Scott saw the development of thought and communication through 
              composition as central in preparing students for participation in 
              a democratic society. As Corbett and Conners remark, "Scott 
              drew a strong distinction between a system that tests or grades 
              a composition for administrative purposes and that which evaluates 
              it as a stage in a pupil's progress"; and Scott asserted that 
              the "lay[ing] hold of the student as an individual is, for 
              composition work, simply indispensible" (Corbett and Conners 
              534). His preferred solution to the exceedingly high student-teacher 
              ratios of his time was to lower the ratio, but given the realistic 
              situation of composition instruction, offered Paragraph-Writing 
              as a pragmatic instructional path.
 
 The end of Scott's participation in rhetoric essentially curtailed 
              any significant intellectual interest in composition theory. Scott's 
              rhetoric department was dissolved only two years after his retirement, 
              and English departments did not seriously attempt to develop a rhetoric 
              doctorate for some time Instead, the task of composition instruction 
              fell mainly to graduate students and service employees, a situation 
              which persists in many universities to this day (Corbett and Conners 
              535).
 
 Fittingly, the current-traditionalist view of the paragraph did 
              not meet any serious scrutiny until the 1960s, when academia's acquiescence 
              to the needs of corporate America was becoming uncomfortable, and 
              political dissent was increasing. At this time, the humanities were 
              steeped in existentialism, rendering the practice of extracting 
              ethical maxims from literature and philosophy exceedingly problematic. 
              And, this was the Cold War era, and a time when increasing globalization 
              was taxing communication among disparate cultures. Meanwhile, the 
              secular pieties of scientific dogma were being undermined by Thomas 
              Kuhn, who proposed that science is hardly pure of cultural and political 
              concerns.
 
 Composition theorists were hardly immune to the tenor of these times, 
              and if the scientistic university of the late 19th century prompted 
              a change in teaching composition, so did questions raised against 
              it in the 1960s. The precepts of current-traditional rhetoric-that 
              the composer is in possession of unassailable scientific and ethical 
              truths, which she can set forth to a merely interested audience-were 
              increasingly perceived as untenable. The two theorists who most 
              powerfully shaped the philosophy behind process theory, Kenneth 
              Burke and Kenneth Pike, reassessed the classical considerations 
              of rhetoric that had been ignored by the current-traditionalists. 
              Burke and Pike's concerns regarding rhetoric were political and 
              social, and as such they took seriously the need to develop communication 
              techniques that could bind together peoples of disparate concerns 
              and cultures. Both perceived the need for a new rhetoric capable 
              of addressing the communication challenges of an increasingly global, 
              post World War II climate, and both perceived the need for a rhetoric 
              capable of surpassing even the Aristotelian goal of persuasion. 
              Burke was highly suspicious of the prevailing notion that science 
              is objective and pure of social and political agendas. Burke named 
              the goal for a 20th century rhetoric "identification" 
              rather than persuasion, and the difference between the new rhetoric 
              and the classical one can be located in the need to not just move 
              an audience, but to move the speaker as well. That is, the goal 
              of communication, and thus composition, became one of inquiry, and 
              as such, invention took on greater import.
 
 The catch-word of the 1960s rhetorician was "discovery," 
              as opposed to the reporting role that Berlin notices in current-traditional 
              writing assignments of the late 19th century. The rhetorical role 
              of the writer in the discovery process is altogether different from 
              that of the reporter, and his audience is not the passive audience 
              looking to be informed. Nor is the audience conceived of as in classical 
              rhetoric, that is, as an other to be persuaded. In process rhetoric, 
              the audience can often be identified as none other than the writer 
              herself, who looks for the best possible reasons for reaching a 
              provisional truth, as in Aristotelian rhetoric, or even as a Platonic 
              quest for truth, as Gage asserts. As such, the writing, as an investigation, 
              becomes increasingly inductive by necessity; and the role of writing 
              shifts from a finished product designed to inform, persuade, or 
              argue a point with an audience as other; and toward a synthetic, 
              or dialectical, search for truth in the author's own mind.
 
 The attack of Bain's paragraphing rules in the 1960s resulted, on 
              one level, from the long overdue recognition that his rules do not 
              adequately describe the varieties of paragraphs that are used in 
              good writing. On another level, however, they can be perceived as 
              a recognition that an insistence on the deductive paragraph is unsuitable 
              to a rhetoric that emphasizes identification between composer and 
              audience, and which views the act of writing as inquiry-led, rather 
              than setting forth. In an "identification" rhetoric, the 
              insistence on deductive paragraphing, and thus deductive form, is 
              ill-suited for two reasons. For one, inductive form is more persuasive 
              to the audience, particularly for an audience who does not share 
              the social and political assumptions of the author. For another, 
              induction is the process by which the writer discovers her own meaning, 
              and such meaning is increasingly seen as something that is developed 
              through the writing process, not prior to it. In such a view, writing 
              as process is writing as invention; it is epistemic in itself, rather 
              than the vehicle for setting forth knowledge.
 The 
              Contemporary Situation
 From the perspective of our times, current-traditional theory can 
              thus be seen as a sort of dark age in rhetoric, and since the 1960s, 
              a number of approaches have been developed to address writing as 
              a more vital, epistemic activity. In his Writing Instruction in 
              the 19th Century American College, Berlin identified three contemporary 
              approaches to composition theory which attempt to overstep the current-traditional 
              approach, and to move writing instruction away from the limitations 
              of teaching form. They share an awareness, according to Berlin, 
              that "[w]hen we teach students to write, we are teaching more 
              than an instrumental skill. We are teaching a mode of conduct, a 
              way of responding to experience" (86). Each in their own way 
              work to derail the paragraph prescriptions that continue to dominate 
              freshman rhetorics. These three approaches are 1) the classical, 
              2) the expressionistic, and 3) the new rhetoric.6
 
 The first of these approaches-the classical-attempts to return writing 
              to its aims in classical rhetoric; specifically, as an art of public 
              discourse that readies the student to participate in the decision-making 
              processes of a democracy. While the current-traditional approach 
              considers the audience only in terms of its rational capacities, 
              classical rhetoric considers the audience's emotional stance and 
              social reality (Berlin 88). Corbett's Classical Rhetoric for the 
              Modern Student7 is a composition rhetoric based on the classical 
              approach, which analyzes choices in writing according to their effect 
              on the audience rather than accentuating correctness in grammar 
              and structure, and as such differs radically from most composition 
              textbooks on the market. This difference extends to the consideration 
              of the paragraph. For one thing, its section dealing with arrangement 
              does not break down formal requirements by paragraphs, as most contemporary 
              rhetorics and handbooks do. The modern-traditional prescripts of 
              unity, coherence and development are conspicuously absent. Instead, 
              paragraphing is relegated to a small subsection of style, and is 
              explained in its original, pre-Bainian sense; that is, as a typographical 
              device-a punctuation mark more pronounced than the period-and like 
              all typographical marks, conceived as the written equivalent of 
              intonation and used to facilitate reading, or to "mark the 
              shifts in the development of thought and indicate the relationship 
              of the parts" (369). Thus paragraphing functions as a guide 
              to interpretation, recalling Rodger's dictum, "To compose is 
              to create; to indent is to interpret" (Rodgers 43).
 
 For Corbett, paragraph length, or "density," is primarily 
              a stylistic consideration. "Many considerations, of course, 
              dictate whether paragraphs will be long or short-the subject matter, 
              the occasion, the audience" (369). The need for paragraph development, 
              however, is not ignored. While Corbett attends to the various justifications 
              for the one- or two-sentence paragraph, such as the need for transition 
              or emphasis, he does note the probable reason for many short paragraphs 
              in student essays: "Many of the one- and two-sentence paragraphs 
              that students write have no rhetorical justification whatever. Such 
              short paragraphs simply reveal that the students have not developed 
              their thoughts adequately" (369). His answer is to return to 
              the topics, which is, of course, one point on which the current-traditionalist 
              and the classicist agree. And as such, paragraph pedagogy becomes 
              an occasion for invention in both approaches. The difference lies 
              in Corbett's concept of the paragraph as a rhetorical marker, with 
              the level of development dependent on the occasion it serves, rather 
              than on any requirements of the paragraph per se.
 
 While Berlin distinguishes between the "expressionist" 
              and "new" rhetoric approaches to writing instruction, 
              he does admit that the distinction can become tenuous at the ideological 
              level, and imperceptible in the classroom (91). Both are concerned 
              primarily with writing as a vehicle by which the writer discovers 
              her own truths, and as such both are less concerned with the audience's 
              response to the composition than is classical rhetoric. Adherents 
              to the new rhetoric as identified by Berlin have all been identified 
              as process pedagogues, and he names Becker, Pike, and Young as proponents 
              of this approach. Here, the writing process is seen as a dialectical 
              "means of arriving at truth," as Berlin puts it, and the 
              role of language in this arrival is crucial. (91) In the expressionistic 
              approach "[t]he focus is on the individual's private struggle 
              to arrive at truth" which is "conceived as a result of 
              a private vision that must be constantly consulted in writing" 
              (88-89).8 The difference between the two in Berlin's schema is the 
              role of language: in the new rhetoric, truth is essentially constructed 
              within the language act; in the expressionistic rhetoric, language 
              leads us to a truth that exists outside of language. But the pedagogical 
              ramifications of both are similar, and for my purposes they can 
              be united in that, first, composition is seen as essentially inductive, 
              or a search for conclusions; and second, the primary audience is 
              the writer. As such, the two approaches tend to disregard the prescriptive 
              teaching of structure, and have done little to address such issues 
              as paragraphing rules.
 
 These three composition approaches, the classical, new, and expressionistic, 
              offer ideological stances regarding the teaching of composition 
              that return to the emphasis on good writing as good thinking. But 
              as anyone who teaches composition knows, current-traditional pedagogy 
              is still very much alive. The circumstances in which the topic-led, 
              or deductive, paragraph became the norm are still in place. The 
              "why Johnny can't write" inquiries that solidified the 
              current-traditional approach to writing in the late 19th century 
              still abound and are the subject of political debates and pressure 
              on secondary schools in the form of proficiency exams, and thus 
              students entering the university have usually been trained via a 
              current-traditional approach. Prospective employers, and even many 
              professors both inside and outside of English departments, still 
              expect the same outcome from composition classes: that the students 
              be prepared to expound upon bodies of information that they receive 
              more or less passively, and to organize that information into a 
              given, largely formulaic structure. The scientistic model of education 
              still prevails, with education seen largely as an accumulation of 
              knowledge. As long as this model persists, composition will remain 
              marginalized.
 
 Even in the university English department, the advantages of the 
              current-traditional approach are much the same now as they were 
              in 1900. Composition classrooms, often the only places where freshman 
              university students are treated as individuals, are still led mostly 
              by graduate students or service employees, who are given the task 
              of attending to a large body of student writing for very little 
              money or prestige, and who are expected to raise their students' 
              writing to a competency standard in the course of a semester or 
              two. The current-tradition's prescriptive rules are highly teachable, 
              and freshman English textbooks still include them. Maxine Hairston's 
              Contemporary Composition, for instance, contains a 37-page chapter 
              on paragraphs that follows current-traditional rules quite faithfully.
 
 Yet however much Hairston's composition textbook emphasizes a current-traditional 
              approach to paragraph development, she also understood the problems 
              inherent in the approach. In an 1986 article, she addressed the 
              split personality evident in many composition classrooms by identifying 
              two different types of writing, which she calls Class II and Class 
              III writing (Class I writing being "short memos and brief notes"). 
              She defines Class III writing as "[e]xtended REFLECTIVE writing 
              in which the writer discovers much of his or her thought during 
              the writing process." Class II writing includes "research 
              reports, technical papers, laboratory reports, case studies, or 
              summaries and analyses of assigned readings"; and such writing 
              is "SELF-LIMITING; that is, before the writer begins to write, 
              she already knows most of what she is going to write or she can 
              easily retrieve the content from memory or known sources" ("Different" 
              95). Clearly, Hairston is making a distinction between the current-traditional 
              and the new (or expressionistic or process) approaches.
 
 Hairston notes that while composition instructors often prefer to 
              assign Class III writing, it is inevitably less teachable. In Class 
              II writing, one can "show students how to outline a paper for 
              which they know the content, show them how to start a paragraph 
              with a topic sentence and downshift into examples [. . .]"; 
              however, she believes that this sort of advice is not applicable 
              to Class III writing: "Class III writing is much harder to 
              teach because we have no working prescriptions for it and often 
              cannot describe [. . .] just how one goes about discovering, organizing, 
              and then restructuring material" (ibid. 100-101).
 
 As Hairston correctly notes, many students prefer Class II writing. 
              It is more practical, as it will be used throughout their academic 
              and professional careers, and it follows, after all, the structuring 
              advice of their composition rhetorics. Further, as Hairston also 
              notes, students don't like Class III writing because it's risky. 
              Moving from inductive investigation to deductive presentation is 
              much more time consuming, and there's no guarantee that the writer 
              will make it to interesting and coherent conclusions, no guarantee 
              of a good finished product at the end. It's a lot more work with 
              a lot less surety of a decent grade.
 
 While it is true that sometimes, when a student ventures to write 
              well by thinking well and reaching her own conclusions, the writing 
              structure actually improves, perhaps because her thinking has deepened, 
              and the connections made among ideas are often more carefully and 
              strategically considered. However, this is not always, or even often, 
              the case. Papers appear that seem to be honest attempts to fulfill 
              the assignment, but the work is, on the whole, inchoate and structurally 
              incoherent. The writer has attempted to think through the topic 
              and develop a stance, but has not been able to, in the week or two 
              that she has been given to complete the assignment, create a clear 
              and linear explication of her position. One might say that the writing 
              has succeeded as a process, but failed as a product; or that the 
              student has made some progress in regard to invention, but has failed 
              to reach any certain conclusions, and has therefore been unable 
              to proceed to effective arrangement.
 
 In speaking of Class III writing, Hairston uses adjectives such 
              as "romantic," "original, "expressive" 
              and "creative"; as with the term "expressionistic," 
              such language makes it sound like something very artsy is going 
              on in the classroom, and we cannot blame our students, few of whom 
              are interested in becoming artists, for shunning such work. Given 
              Irmscher's analogies of the writer as either "a sculptor who 
              finds form while sculpting" or "a bricklayer who piles 
              bricks to construct a wall," most students prefer the bricklaying 
              approach. Compared to Class II writing, the whole process of bringing 
              Class III writing to completion is described in mystifying terms.
 
 Perhaps for this reason, Berlin proposes renaming "new" 
              writing "epistemic," and "expressionistic" writing 
              "Platonic" ("Rhetoric" 88-89)-that is, the point 
              of such writing is not to produce some beautiful work of art, after 
              all, but to return writing to a central role in an educational process 
              that emphasizes the ability to decide the best reasons for a particular 
              stance on issues that have alternative stances. The lingering association 
              of "Class III" writing (to sidestep the various and constantly 
              proliferating terms for writing that is essentially reflective and 
              investigative) with artistic, or literary, writing is perhaps the 
              most debilitating point against it. Most likely the association 
              persists because Blair conflated composition with the study of belles 
              lettres, and because composition instructors are trained in literature 
              more than anything. This association prevents writing teachers, 
              as well as professors throughout the university, from recognizing 
              such writing as central to the educational process, and as central 
              to critical thinking skills as it is to "creativity"-at 
              least to creativity as defined in a narrow, artistic sense.
 
 Instead of viewing composition instruction as a "how to" 
              course to produce a competent final product, which is, essentially, 
              the purpose behind current-traditional instruction, composition 
              can be viewed as a workplace in which students develop stances on 
              issues that have no clear-cut answers. In such a classroom, reading 
              and classroom discussion is not geared to imparting facts, but to 
              identifying controversies and exercising critical thinking, which 
              the students work out in the writing process. Evaluation of writing 
              is geared less to the final product, and more to its role in the 
              student's progress in developing and refining independent thought-an 
              insight that we can attribute to Scott, or for that matter, Blair 
              or Aristotle, or even and more particularly to that ancient enemy 
              of rhetorical study, Plato. Thus instructors such as Gage would 
              evaluate a thick stack of drafts instead of a thin stack of finished 
              products, and writing could be assessed as documentation of the 
              student's progress as a thinker first, and a writer second.
 
 When such an approach is proposed, the final product is devalued 
              by necessity. First of all, accentuating the final product booby-traps 
              the process: if the bottom line is to find a stance and explicate 
              it, and yet evaluation emphasizes structural considerations, few 
              students are going to go after the hard work of developing one to 
              any extent: easier to take a ready-made stance, whether that be 
              the instructor's or the student's own knee-jerk response. And second 
              of all, what is the practical purpose of developing such critical 
              thinking into a finished product? After all, in the real world of 
              industry, where most of our students are going, they won't be asked 
              to produce finished products that entail much "Class III" 
              writing. They'll be writing memos and progress reports and technical 
              reports, and all that is covered under technical writing, and rightly 
              so. Class II writing is also largely sufficient for research reports 
              written for classes outside of the freshman English class. If the 
              purpose of freshman English is to develop such skills, then we should 
              be having our students do technical writing, as composition theorists 
              such as Linda Flower propose. In all such writing, Bain's paragraph 
              is ideal, and the current-traditional approach is sufficient to 
              the task.
 
 So why ask for Class III writing? It's the same question that Gage 
              asked when he titled his essay "Why Write?" One answer 
              is that the scientistic model of education is showing signs of wear. 
              As Stanley Fish notes in "Rhetoric,"
 
 As I write, the fortunes of rhetorical man are on the upswing, as 
              in discipline after discipline there is evidence of what has been 
              called the interpretive turn, the realization (at least for those 
              it seizes) that the givens of any field of activity-including the 
              facts it commands, the procedures it trusts in, and the values it 
              expresses and extends-are socially and politically constructed, 
              are fashioned by man rather than delivered by God or Nature. (128)
 
 Composition was once the cornerstone of education because it developed 
              the ability to enter into the decision-making responsibilities of 
              citizens in the social and political spheres, who needed to form 
              stances in situations where knowledge could only be provisional. 
              Rhetoric was central because it dealt with knowledge that is socially 
              and politically constructed, and education involved the consideration 
              of such provisional knowledge. As even scientific knowledge is increasingly 
              seen as provisional and culture-bound, and created within the purview 
              of language, university departments outside of English are increasingly 
              emphasizing the value of writing in their own disciplines, evidenced 
              by movements toward across-the-curriculum writing programs. As education 
              in all departments increasingly accentuates critical thinking over 
              the accumulation of information, the connection between writing 
              and learning must, or at least should, strengthen. Holding to the 
              view that composition has a primarily expository purpose, taught 
              by current-traditional prescriptions that emphasize style over content, 
              is insufficient to the task that writing instruction needs to hold 
              throughout the university. What we do in freshman composition classes 
              could well define the position of English departments in the future.
 
 Works Cited
 
 Bain, Alexander. English Composition and Rhetoric. 1871. Facsimile. 
              Delmar: Scholars' Facsimiles & Reprints, 1996.
 
 Becker, A.L. "A Tagmemic Approach to Paragraph Analysis." 
              College Composition and Communication XVI.5 (Dec. 1965). Rpt. in 
              The Sentence and the Paragraph. Urbana: National Council of Teachers 
              of English, n.d. 33-38.
 
 Berlin, James A. Writing Instruction in the 19th Century American 
              College. Carbondale: Southern Illinois UP, 1984.
 
 ---. "Rhetoric and Ideology in the Writing Class." College 
              English 50 (1988). Rpt. in Rhetoric: Concepts, Definitions, Boundaries. 
              Ed. William A. Covino and David A. Jolliffe. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 
              1995. 734-751.
 
 Blair, Hugh. Lectures on Rhetoric and Belles Lettres. 1783. Excerpts 
              rpt. in The Rhetorical Tradition: Readings from Classical Times 
              to the Present. 2nd ed. Ed. Patricia Bizzell and Bruce Herzberg. 
              Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2001. 950-980.
 
 Burke, Virginia M. "The Paragraph: Dancer in Chains." 
              Rhetoric: Theories for Application. Ed. Robert M. Garrell. Champaign: 
              National Council of Teachers of English, 1967.
 
 ---. Introduction. The Paragraph in Context. Ed. Virginia M. Burke. 
              Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1969. 5-9.
 
 Christensen, Francis. "Symposium on the Paragraph" College 
              Composition and Communication, XVII.2 (May 1966). Rpt. in The Sentence 
              and the Paragraph. Urbana: National Council of Teachers of English, 
              n.d. 49-55.
 
 Corbett, Edward P.J. and Robert J. Conners. Classical Rhetoric for 
              the Modern Student. 4th ed. New York: Oxford UP, 1999.
 
 Crowley, Sharon. "The Methodical Memory on Display: The Five-Paragraph 
              Theme." The Methodical Memory on Display: Invention in Current-Tradition 
              Rhetoric. Board of Trustees, Southern Illinois University, 1990. 
              Rpt. in Rhetoric: Concepts, Definitions, Boundaries. Ed. William 
              A. Covino and David A. Jolliffe. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 1995. 
              265-281.
 
 Ferreira-Buckley, Linda and Winifred Bryan Horner. "Writing 
              Instruction in Great Britain: The Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries." 
              A Short History of Writing Instruction: From Ancient Greece to Modern 
              America. Ed. James J. Murphy. 2nd ed. Mahwah, NJ: Hermagoras P, 
              2001. 173-212.
 
 Fish, Stanley. "Rhetoric." Critical Terms for Literary 
              Studies. Ed. Frank Lentricchia and Thomas McLaughlin. Chicago: U 
              of Chicago P, 1990. Rpt. in Rhetoric: Concepts, Definitions, Boundaries. 
              Ed. William A. Covino and David A. Jolliffe. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 
              1995. 122-140.
 
 Gage, John T. "Why Write?" The Teaching of Writing. Ed. 
              Anthony Petroskey and David Bartholomew. The National Society of 
              the Study of Education, 1986. Rpt. in Rhetoric: Concepts, Definitions, 
              Boundaries. Ed. William A. Covino and David A. Jolliffe. Boston: 
              Allyn and Bacon, 1995. 715-733.
 
 Hairston, Maxine. Contemporary Composition. 4th edition. Boston: 
              Houghton Mifflin, 1986.
 
 ---. "Different Products, Different Processes: A Theory About 
              Writing." College Composition and Communication 37 (Dec 1986). 
              Rpt. in Against the Grain : A Volume in Honor of Maxine Hairston. 
              Ed. David A. Jolliffe et al. Cresskill, N.J: Hampton Press, 2002. 
              91-103.
 
 Irmscher, William F. Teaching Expository Writing. New York: Holt, 
              Rinehart and Winston, 1979.
 
 Lewis, Edwin Herbert. The History of the English Paragraph. Chicago: 
              U of Chicago P, 1894.
 
 Rodgers, Paul C., Jr. "A Discourse-Centered Rhetoric of the 
              Paragraph." College Composition and Communication, XVII.1 (Feb. 
              1966). Rpt. in The Sentence and the Paragraph. Urbana: National 
              Council of Teachers of English, n.d. 39-48.
 
 Scott, Fred N. and Joseph V. Denney. "Laws and Theory of the 
              Paragraph." Paragraph-Writing. 2nd ed. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 
              1894. Rpt. in The Paragraph in Context. Ed. Virginia M. Burke. Indianapolis: 
              Bobbs-Merrill, 1969. 23-29.
 
 Notes
 
 1 As Virginia M. Burke pointed out in her 1967 essay, "The 
              Paragraph: Dancer in Chains," expository prose from the 17th 
              through the 19th century shows an unclear distinction between the 
              paragraph and the sentence on the one hand, and the paragraph and 
              the section on the other. In the 18th century, writers such as Daniel 
              Defoe and Samuel Johnson often composed in one to two sentence paragraphs; 
              along with earlier prose stylists such as Lyly, Spenser and Walton, 
              they often devised paragraphs of one extremely long sentence, and 
              it is perhaps this practice that led Bain to consider the paragraph 
              as analogous to the sentence. However, other writers, including 
              Richard Hooker of the 16th century through James Russell Lowell 
              of the 19th, tended to conceive of paragraphs as analogous to entire 
              sections, and wrote extremely long paragraphs-sometimes over 2,000 
              words in Lowell's case (38).
  2 
              See "A Tagmemic Approach to Paragraph Analysis," in which 
              Becker extends the tagmemic approach to sentence analysis to the 
              paragraph, and identifies a variety of patterns possible in paragraph 
              development.   3 
              In her introduction to The Paragraph in Context, (5) Virginia M. 
              Burke cites E.H. Lewis, the late 19th century historian of the paragraph, 
              who found a sixth century manuscript that included paragraphing 
              in quotations. However, according to Lewis's findings, the modern 
              paragraph, with the printers em marking the beginning of the paragraph, 
              was not in evidence until 1482.
 4 Interestingly enough, Rodgers did cite Scott and Denney, along 
              with a great many other paragraph theorists in his essay, "A 
              Discourse-Centered Rhetoric of the Paragraph," but he did not 
              cite Scott as the originator of the concept of stadia of thought 
              as distinguishable from the paragraph. Yet Rodgers' theory of discourse 
              stadia is identical to Scott's, and this fact is obvious when one 
              compares Scott's diagram, p. 23 above, to one illustrating Rodgers' 
              stadia of discourse theory, as explained by his colleague, Francis 
              Christensen (53). (In this diagram, "S" groups stand for 
              stadia and "P" groups stand for paragraphs.)
 ______________________________________
 Case I SSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
 PPPPPPPPPPPPPPP
 Case 
              IIa SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS or IIb SSSS SSSSS SSSSSSPPPPP PPPPPPPPPPP PPPPPPPPPPPPPPPP
 Case 
              III SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSPPPPP PPPPPPPP PPPPPPPP PPPPPPPP PPPPPPPPPPP
 ______________________________________
  5 
              Virginia M. Burke points this out in her introduction to The Paragraph 
              in Context (5): "The paragraph graphic mark or signal, the 
              oldest in Greek manuscripts, first appeared as a horizontal stroke, 
              sometimes with a dot over it, just below the first two or three 
              letters of a line to indicate that a sentence or some larger unit 
              of discourse was closing in the underscored line."   6 
              In his 1988 essay, "Rhetoric and Ideology in the Writing Class," 
              Berlin renames "new" rhetoric "social-epistemic," 
              and emphasizes in this approach the writer's realization of her 
              standing in her economic and social situation.   7 
              The fourth edition, which I am using, is co-authored by Robert J. 
              Conners.  8 
              Berlin cites William Coles, Jr., Ken Macrorie, James E. Miller and 
              Stephan Judy, and Ronald Stewart, as proponents of such an approach.   |