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Showing 1 to 15 of 40 results Save | Export
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Spencer-Maor, Faye; Randolph, Robert E., Jr. – Composition Studies, 2016
This article begins by asking readers to make a modest supposition: HBCUs are, perhaps, one of the last frontiers for sustained feminist praxis-administratively and pedagogically. The authors write that they struggle with the situation, and find it both lamentable and paradoxical, since many HBCUs were originally founded and/or administered by…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Feminism, Black Colleges, Writing Instruction
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Beasley, James – Journal of General Education, 2012
Henry W. Sams served on the editorial boards of "College English," "College Composition and Communication," and the "Journal of General Education." He was able to influence the kinds of articles on composition and rhetoric being published throughout this period, and he and his colleagues increased broad awareness of…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Writing (Composition), General Education, Journal Articles
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Driscoll, Dana Lynn; Perdue, Sherry Wynn – Writing Center Journal, 2012
In the last 15 years, writing center scholars have increasingly called for more evidence to validate writing centers' practices. Work by Paula Gillespie (2002), Neal Lerner (2009), and Isabelle Thompson et al. (2009) underscore this need. Missing from these discussions, however, is a thorough understanding of the past and current research…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Laboratories, Scholarship, Research Methodology
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Mendenhall, Annie S. – College English, 2011
This essay provides an account of The Ohio State University's (OSU) rhetoric department during the tenure of Joseph Villiers Denney, arguing that he appropriated and repurposed national trends in education and rhetoric in ways that complicate the narrative of rhetoric and composition's decline in the late nineteenth century. In this essay, the…
Descriptors: Land Grant Universities, College Faculty, Reputation, Writing (Composition)
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Jones, Rebecca – Composition Studies, 2008
This article presents a course design of English 450: Theories and Methods of Argument. The course is an upper level course in the Writing concentration of B. A. in English and American Language and Literature at the University of Tennessee, Chattanooga, a metropolitan university in the South. At the 400 level, Theories and Methods of Argument is…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Higher Education, Surveys, Rhetoric
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Kerschbaum, Stephanie L.; Killingsworth, M. Jimmie – Composition Forum, 2007
The number of first-year writing and writing­-across-the-curriculum programs has been increasing at institutions across the United States, but a similar rise has not been seen in the growth of concentrations in rhetoric and writing as an undergraduate major or minor. In this program profile, the authors describe how the Discourse Studies faculty…
Descriptors: College Programs, Writing (Composition), Undergraduate Study, Rhetoric
Peeples, Timothy; Rominski, Paula; Strickland, Michael – Composition Studies, 2007
In this article, the authors use two sets of terms--"chronos/kairos" and strategy/tactic--to frame the way they tell the story or the "case" of Professional Writing and Rhetoric's (PWR's) developing identity at Elon University. In doing so, they offer to the readers a framework for identity development that is portable across contexts. The authors…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Program Development, Higher Education, College English
Scott, Tony – Composition Studies, 2007
In this article, the author argues that compartmentalization in the way that writing education tends to be discussed and therefore understood in the professional discourse of rhetoric and composition should be critically examined and transcended if the field is going to lead the development of undergraduate writing majors. Any new major should be…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), English Departments, Horses, Writing Instruction
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Johnson, T. R.; Letter, Joe; Livingston, Judith Kemerait – College English, 2009
The authors describe their individual and collective experiences reconstructing their New Orleans-based university composition program in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. They emphasize how the concept of "floating foundations" helps account for changes in their students' interests, and they suggest that this idea is applicable to the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Writing (Composition), Authors, Emotional Response
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D'Angelo, Frank – College English, 2007
A symposium in the November 2006 issue of "College English" addresses the question, "What should college English be?" In this article, the author presents his answer to this question--it should be a functional approach to English studies. By English studies he means everything that is done in English departments. Most English departments teach…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, English Departments, Creative Writing, College English
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Stroupe, Craig – College English, 2005
Three ways that English department Web sites express, lost-island rhetoric, the rhetorical tropes on these sites, which express an ironic, dialogical tension between being lost and being found in the global economy is discussed. Lost-island rhetoric expresses the profession's own contradictory impulses considering the network, the desire to…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Rhetoric, Internet, English Departments
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Clark, Suzanne – Rhetoric Society Quarterly, 1995
Offers a utopian vision of what the place of rhetoric should be in a department that thinks of itself as literary. Argues that a Ph.D. in English that encompasses both literature and rhetoric works because it is really a degree in rhetoric. (TB)
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, English Departments, Graduate Students, Higher Education
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Collins, Daniel F.; Sutton, Robert C. – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2001
Notes that it is not easy to help students enter into ongoing dialogues on ethics in both school-based and more immediate environments, ask students to consider ethics on both personal and social planes, and require students to write and reflect to stave off the disembodiment of culture. Describe a course that helps students to see rhetoric and…
Descriptors: English Departments, Ethics, Rhetoric, Social Problems
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Friend, Christy – College English, 1992
Notes that many scholars see Gerald Graff as a revolutionary critic who provides a model for making fundamental changes within the discipline of English. Focuses on the historical marginalization of the fields of composition and rhetoric studies not addressed by Graff in his book "Professing Literature." (RS)
Descriptors: College English, Educational Change, English Departments, Higher Education
Crow, Peter – ADE Bulletin, 1988
In a response to the Minnesota Conference on the Future of Doctoral Study in English, states that the consensus to embrace rhetoric as a unifying focus would undercut small colleges. (MM)
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Educational Trends, English Departments, English Instruction
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