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Hi Chris --
Several instructors at Guilford College in Greensboro, NC (including me) teach season 4 of The Wire as the major text in ENG 102: College Reading & Writing. Some of us teach it in conjunction with the "education" and "equality" sections in Rereading America, a comp reader from Bedford St. Martin's. Some also use (or use instead) They Say / I Say from WW Norton.
We have lots of students here who've not traveled far from their NC hometowns, or who've never left the American Southeast at all. We also have a sizable "non-traditional/adult student" population. In the past few years, the majority of students in Wire-focused sections of ENG 102 say (on course evaluations) that they LOVED working with the show itself & with the issues/ideas it raises.
In my version of ENG 102, we first view & discuss a couple clips from season one: the opening scene of the entire series (the death of Snot-Boogie) and the scene where D'Angelo explains the game of chess to Wallace & Bodie. Then I ask students to read/study the summaries of seasons 1-3 on HBO's website & on Wikipedia. I also give a few low-stakes quizzes on selected characters--folks from seasons 1-3 who play important roles in season 4 (Prez, Bubbles, Bunny, Carver, etc).
This seems to be sufficient in terms of preparing the students to dive into season 4. In terms of major writing assignments, I ask all students to focus their "analysis papers" on The Wire, and our discussions of the episodes focus on preparing them for this task. (assignment instructions attached).
For their final "creative project," they have the option of writing two "missing" or "supplemental" scenes from The Wire season 4, along with a brief (make-believe) persuasive cover letter to David Simon explaining why (given the show's arguments) the scenes they've scripted should be filmed & included among DVD extras. In prep for this, we view those little "webisodes" (on amazon.com) that feature Omar & Prop Joe in their younger days.
Another option for the creative project is for students to prepare a "Parents' Guide to Violence in The Wire." This option asks students to imagine that some parents have expressed concern/alarm over the use of the show in first-yr comp classes b/c of the show's violence. If they choose to create a "Guide," students are to explain the connection b/t the violence in the show & the overall argument of season four. In the "body" of the Guide, their job is to provide quick overviews of several super-violent scenes, and to account for the relationship between that violence & the "big ideas" of the show. (fyi, no one's ever chosen the "Guide" option, but my goal here is to give them a way to practice performing a the tricky rhetorical situation---one where they must acknowledge the shocking violence of the show while trying to persuade readers that the violence is necessary/worth it).
Hope this isn't T.M.I. I'd love to hear how your experiment works out, and to discuss further my experiences if you like.
good luck! ~ cynthia
Cynthia,
Thanks so much for your input/experiences in using The Wire. As of now, my syllabus is very much in the category of something I want to do, but which falls outside the program of the first-year writing course. I'm a grad student at Kansas State and the program hear relies heavily on each first-year student getting the same course experience. Hence, not much room for a lot of experimentation. I like very much your approach and the spelled-out criteria and expectations for the analysis paper in the attached .pdf file.
Again, thanks for your time and if I make any progress in actually getting approval to teach this course, I'll let you know.
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