Writing and Problem Solving
Writing and Problem Solving
Carol Berkenkotter
Michigan Technological University
Problem solving is common ground for all the disciplines and funda-
mental to all human activities. A writer is a problem solver of a par-
ticular kind. Writers “solutions” will be determined by how they frame
their problems, the goals they set for themselves, and the means or
plans they adopt for achieving those goals.
The relationship between writing and problem solving has been
most recently examined in the research of Linda S. Flower and John R.
Hayes.1 Flower and Hayes are among a number of researchers in diverse
fields who have studied the cognitive processes of experts and novices
thinking aloud on tape as they solved problems in mathematics,
physics, chess playing, and composing.2 The findings in all of these
areas point to a common conclusion: whether the problem solver is a
writer, a musician, a physicist, or a chess player, experts appear to have
an arsenal of strategies which will direct them toward a seminal (if not
final) solution. Novices, on the other hand, most often rely on trial and
error. A novice chess player, for example, might randomIy try a variety
of moves in a chess problem; an expert, in contrast, will employ a
powerful strategy, such as “try to control the center of the board,”
drawing from long term memory a pattern which matches the con-
figuration on the board. Similarly, novice writers when given a com-
posing task will simply begin writing while thinking aloud, hoping
for the “right” sentence that will carry them through the whole written
draft. Expert writers, like expert chess players, are able to draw strat-
egies from long term memory which put them in “control of the
board.” These strategies involve setting and resetting goals, generating
ideas, exploring their relationships, and finally connecting them in
some kind of analytic framework aimed at a specific reader.
Although differing in theoretical assumptions and research meth-
odology,3 Flower and Hayes share with James Britton the view that
writing involves highly complex cognitive processes. In heeding the
research findings of those attempting to track these processes, we are
33
34 Carol Berkenkotter
Setting goals will encourage students to develop plans, that is, to think
about the method or means by which they will reach their goal.
Typically, as students begin to write, their goals change and break
down into smaller units or subgoals. As their goal base changes, they
will restructure and adapt plans to fit their deepening understanding
of the task at hand.
Setting goals and refining plans to meet them should not be con-
fused with outlining, which impedes these processes. Outlines are
inflexible; goal setting and planning should be fluid and flexible,
suited to the students’ changing awareness of what they want to say
and why.
list of new uses for bricks. The rest of the class will then decide
whether you are to receive a promotion or be fired.
Attribute listing is a strategy for developing greater fluency while
getting ideas down. The brick exercise encourages students to think not
only of what bricks as entities could be used for, but asks them addi-
tionally to break down their mental image of bricks. The listing of
attributes should promote more (and wilder) ideas. In short, attribute
listing helps overcome conceptual blocks that prevent the fullest ex-
pansion and flow of thoughts.
Another technique for releasing the flow of ideas is free writing.
Free writing helps a writer turn off his or her mental “editor” (who is
often preoccupied with the “good manners” of writing, such as spelling
and grammar) and, as one writer who was trying to overcome a writing
block put it, “free write your way to freedom.” Furthermore, free
writing allows one to hold considerations of form at bay and concen-
trate on getting down as many thoughts as possible. Two variations of
free writing are, keeping a journal and “timed” or “shotgun” writings,
which call for students to write down everything that is on their mind.
During a “shotgun” exercise, the students are not to lift their pens from
the paper; if they run out of things to say, they simply write “I have
run out of things to say,” until something pops into their head. Like
listmaking, attribute listing, brainstorming, and journal writing, free
writing helps students increase the output of ideas. After a sufficient
quantity of ideas has been generated, they can go on to assess quality.
What are his or her ethical. concerns and values? (home, family,
job success, religion, money, car, social acceptance)
What are his or her beliefs and prejudices?6
Once students have a concrete picture of their reader in mind, they
should next consider how they want to affect the reader’s thinking
about their subject, and, finally, by what means they can best achieve
their purpose. For example: If they are trying to get their audience to
change an opinion, what tone do they want to use? What diction? How
much information do they need to present? How can they best organize
that information? How long and complex should their sentences be?
All of these choices will grow from an analysis of the audience that
progresses from questions that give the reader a real world identity to
questions of how a writer can best present a subject to this reader.
A teacher I know uses the following deceptively simple exercise in a
technical writing course to get his students to think precisely about the
relationship between audience, subject, and purpose:
You are to write the instructions for making a house from
Lincoln Logs for the ten-to-twelve-year-old readers of Jack and Jill
magazine.
He then brings the Lincoln Logs to class and role-plays a child follow-
ing each set of instructions to the letter. The log house exercise vividly
demonstrates to students the importance of a clear sense of audience.
/
Pressure
/ \ Lack of Wnfan&ar with Purpose of
Grade Personal writing writing techniques ’ paper not No set goals
problems de f ined\j
experience Define your
problem and
Self-esteem
who your reader
Reader not No plan of Not sure what will be
kept in mind attack you want to I
\ 1 accomplish Gather
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No sub-goals I
/ \iesult ~E!E!Zeway I Try different
Types t Not sure what approaches
I Fear of writing you want to I
Music
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music concentrate pressure get
I 2
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People 2hl
paper all at I
talking once . Get away from $
I distractions r-
Ideas don’t I
get a chance Try to relax Ft
z
to form as you write s
Figure 1. What makes writing difficult.
Writing and Problem Solving 39
them with a medium for switching back and forth between verbal and
visual modes of thought.
However, students are not often encouraged to write for discovery
purposes outside of their composition courses; nor are they taught to
develop fluent and flexible thinking habits through the use of alternate
languages as they work through problems. Consequently, faculty are
confronted by students who claim they “hate writing” and who depend
on the textbook to arrive at solutions to math, science, and engineering
problems. One response to this curricular dilemma is to make the use
of visual techniques such as tree diagrams and flow charts part of
writing instruction across the curriculum. This will give students ex-
perience verbalizing the subject matter they are ordinarily taught to
think about only in equations, formulas, or other nonverbal modes.
The following writing strategies are intended for use in disciplines in
which writing is usually not associated with course content.
Focus on Conceptualization
Arthur Whimbey and Jack Lochhead have developed a technique that
fosters verbal conceptualization by asking physics and math students
to work in pairs on verbal reasoning problems. As one student works
a problem, the other asks a series of questions aimed at getting the
problem solver to verbalize the mental processes he or she is going
through-a step at a time. The questioners are told to keep the pr oblem
solvers talking as they work in order to make them aware of what they
are thinking at all times. Then the pair trades roles as they work
another problem.
The following problem and solution is typical of the material
Whimbey and Lochhead use with their students.
Problem
On a certain day I ate lunch at Tommy’s, took out two books from
the library (The Sea Wolf and Martin Eden, both by Jack London),
visited the museum, and had a cavity filled, Tommy’s is closed on
Wednesday, the library is closed on weekends, the museum is only
open Monday, Wednesday and Friday, and my dentist has office
hours Tuesday, Friday and Saturday. On which day of the week did
I do all these things?
Solving the Problem
Step 1. Suggestion for beginning the problem: The restrictions on
when these activities occurred are stated in the second
sentence.
Step 2. Tommy’s is closed on Wednesday . . .
S M T rstv TH F SAT
Step 3. . . . the library is closed on weekends . . .
%MT&VTHFm
42 Carol Berkenkotter
&MZwZF)‘TF&H-
Step 5. . . and my dentist has office hours Tuesday, Friday and
l
Notes