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Mullin, Joan A.; Childers, Pamela B. – Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies, Issues and Ideas, 2020
After twenty-five years, the authors find that the "natural" writing center-WAC connection has proven its value over time. Pointing to the growth of WAC-writing centers, their scholarship, role in faculty development and community building, the authors end by reflecting on how this program building over the last years supports and can…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Laboratories, Writing Across the Curriculum, High Schools
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Alexander, Kara Poe – Composition Forum, 2017
In this article Kara Alexander discusses why, as a literacy studies instructor, she believes requiring her students to upload their literacy narratives to the Digital Archive of Literacy Narratives (DALN) is beneficial. She provides three reasons for this requirement: (1) making their work public has the potential to enhance student agency,…
Descriptors: Archives, Personal Narratives, Literacy, Writing (Composition)
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Rideaux, Kia S. – Global Studies of Childhood, 2017
In her manuscript, "Speaking in Tongues: A Letter to Third World Women Writers," author Gloria Evangelina Anzaldúa composes several open and honest letters to women of color, challenging them to actively incorporate the process of writing into their everyday lives. She encourages her readers to engage in organic writing by recapturing…
Descriptors: Females, Minority Groups, Writing (Composition), Young Children
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Tatum, Alfred W. – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2015
This commentary discusses the legacy of Walter Dean Myers in relationship to advancing writing as an intellectual tool of protection for black male teens. Multiple implications are provided for teachers who want to engage black male teens to write fearlessly to extend the legacy of Walter Dean Myers.
Descriptors: Authors, Writing (Composition), African Americans, Males
National Council of Teachers of English, 2016
Since the 1980s, as composition has grown as a scholarly field, the composition job market has grown correspondingly in both size and complexity. Specifically, over the fourteen years since academic year (AY) 2000-2001, ads seeking expertise in composition and rhetoric have consistently made up 30 percent or more of all job ads placed in the…
Descriptors: Best Practices, Personnel Selection, Tenure, Nontenured Faculty
National Council of Teachers of English, 2016
The Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC) represents teachers and scholars of writing and speaking whose work in and beyond colleges and universities regularly extends to sites for online learning, professional workplaces, and both near and far-flung communities. This statement provides guidelines for understanding, assessing,…
Descriptors: Community Involvement, College Faculty, Rhetoric, Writing (Composition)
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Kristopher M. Lotier – College Composition and Communication, 2016
Around 1986, inventional researchers began to presuppose an externalist philosophy of mind, thereby ushering in the postprocess era. Ecological composition and posthumanism, now understood as postprocess inventional models, present direct pedagogical applications, allowing different objects (e.g., databases, search engines) to qualify as writing…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction, Writing Processes, Cognitive Processes
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McKinney, Charlesia – Composition Forum, 2018
This essay offers a review of Jay Dolmage's "Academic Ableism: Disability and Higher Education" and Asao Inoue's "Antiracist Writing Assessment Ecologies: Teaching and Assessing Writing for a Socially Just Future" with the intent of reminding composition instructors of the importance of intersectionality and accessibility. Each…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Disabilities, Attitudes toward Disabilities, Racial Bias
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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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Bourelle, Tiffany – Composition Forum, 2017
This interview with Elizabeth Flynn began over lunch at the 2014 Conference on College Composition and Communication. Bourelle and Flynn originally met to talk about a collaborative research project, but the conversation shifted to their personal lives. Bourelle and Flynn talked about how their lives and their research were intertwined, and…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Interviews, Writing (Composition), Feminism
National Council of Teachers of English, 2017
This position statement reflects the Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC) members' growing commitment to undergraduate research. It also supports members' efforts to foster undergraduate research in writing at their home institutions, whether two- or four-year colleges or universities. This statement affirms undergraduate…
Descriptors: Mentors, Undergraduate Students, Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction
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Berry, Patrick W. – E-Learning and Digital Media, 2014
What does it mean to write for change? How do we negotiate the space between hope and critique? Drawing on Dewey's notion of a common faith, this article contemplates what the author learned from Chip Bruce. It suggests that when we compartmentalize the ideal and the everyday, the hopeful and the critical, we reduce the complexity of human…
Descriptors: Profiles, Educational Philosophy, Writing (Composition), Philosophy
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Roots; Roses – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2020
Mental health professionals who both provide services and effectively make use of them to address their own emotional or psychiatric challenges are called wounded healers. Despite the potential benefits of lived experience, these professionals often must contend with institutions and systems that are discriminatory. The authors use life-writing to…
Descriptors: Mental Health, Mental Health Workers, Health Services, Psychiatry
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Kirtley, Susan – Composition Studies, 2015
This report discusses the answer to the question: What might comic studies learn from the slightly older field of composition and rhetoric? The author asks the question as a member of both fields. It is clear that both disciplines struggle for legitimacy within the academy. While comics studies strives for respectability given the popular nature…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Writing (Composition), Rhetoric, Content Analysis
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Hijazi, Nabila – Composition Forum, 2018
In this interview, Shirley Wilson Logan reflects on her major roles as a scholar, teacher, and an administrator. She describes her journey as chair of the Conference on College Composition and Communication, only one of a few black women to do so. Logan is also credited with launching the study of African American women's rhetoric as a field,…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction, Interviews, College Faculty
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