Chapter 26: Writing to Make Something Happen in the World

CHAPTER 26
Writing to Make Something Happen in the World

CONNECT: What would you like your writing to do, and how can you reach your audience? 2c–e, 26b

CREATE: Write a draft, sketch a plan, or create a storyboard for a writing project that will help make something good happen in your community.

REFLECT: Respond to Fundraising Web page (Justin Dart).

COLLEGE STUDENTS PARTICIPATING in a research study were asked, “What is good writing?” The researchers expected fairly straightforward answers like “writing that gets its message across,” but the students kept coming back to one central idea: good writing “makes something happen in the world.” They felt particular pride in the writing they did for family, friends, and community groups—and for many extracurricular activities that were meaningful to them. They produced newsletters for community action groups, nature guides for local parks, and Web sites for local emergency services. Furthermore, once these students graduated from college, they continued to create—and to value—these kinds of public writing. The writing that matters most to many students and citizens, then, is writing that has an effect in the world: writing that gets up off the page or screen, puts on its working boots, and marches out to get something done!