One of several histories out there to serve as a textbook for Writing Studies graduate courses, which I am teaching this term. A classic, focused on three decades, 1965-1995, and leaning heavily to college composition (his area, and not primarily mine--which is English education and middle/high school writing instruction), one virtue of the book is that it is short, concise and affordable. It was originally released in 1997 and was expensive; so Harris eventually got the rights to the book back, added updates and inter-chapters where he focuses on his own teaching, and republished it in 2012. I had read it when it came out and now read it again.
The main chapters highlight five key words (to follow Raymond Williams's Keywords), a term a chapter, that he thinks are useful for exploring K-College writing instruction: Growth, Voice, Process, Error and Community, and only in the end he talks of digital issues (which have emerged in the last several years). Each of these key terms roughly aligns with a chronological approach for changes in thinking about why/how people have taught writing in schools.
"Growth," for instance, came about as a result of an international conference on writing at Dartmouth in 1966 which produced a book sort of summarizing the talk there that would shape writing instruction for many years, Growth Through English, by John Dixon. The sixties, as you know, were a volatile decade, an explosion of moments in areas such as feminism, environmentalism, anti-racism, pacifism, and so on. Interestingly, schools didn't immediately respond to integrate these societal concerns in the classroom (and indeed never really fully have done so). The Dartmouth conference focused on how the structures on writing in schools had emphasized rigid approaches to required forms and structures and had ignored issues of personal engagement, creativity and relevance. Personal growth became a guiding principle for teaching writing, to go with the individualism of the sixties (the social commitments would come later, in some classrooms focused on social justice issues). Personal narratives would become a centerpiece for some teachers of K-12 writing.
A period focusing on issues of personal "voice" followed this concern with growth, and in the early seventies people became interested in a "process" approach to writing--discovering various stages of writing and drafting writing with teachers instead of merely handing in "products" on due dates. People then began to focus on some cultural issues with respect to errors in writing--is it "wrong" to speak as you do in your community or culture? Can standard English make room for other language use in schools, such as Black English Vernacular (Geneva Smitherman)? These issues of correctness vs. freedom still drive writing instruction, though correctness is largely in control now.
The last chapter focuses on how writing instruction changed from something you are taught from a teacher to something that is learned a bit more democratically in a "classroom community," through the uses of exchanging drafts of writing with peers (as well as the teacher). Thinking of a classroom as a community is still very much in vogue today.
Harris seems to be in dialogue in this book with another, more radical, historian of writing instruction, Marxist scholar James Berlin, who of course takes a more ideological approach that I prefer. Harris, more of a political centrist, and seeing his job as a historian as more descriptive than prescriptive, doesn't to my mind adequately address many of the "community" or sociocultural issues that came to eventually get addressed in many writing classes--racism, sexism, and so on.
But in each of his chapters, Harris illustrates through his key words how there has been a tension in the last few decades between what schools require--the structures and forms schools require one to know--what James Gee calls "essay-text literacy") and the needs and desires of students and society, a tension between freedom and structure that has now largely been lost through a testing craze in schools that shapes all the writing K-college students do, resulting in an emphasis on argumentative writing in prescribed forms. This focus on rigid preparation for tests today is not unlike what led to the 1966 Dartmouth conference, and will probably create the need for such a conference again, to right the ship more in the direction of freedom, creativity and both individual and social needs.