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Meloncon, Lisa; England, Peter – College English, 2011
Although much attention has been paid to issues of contingent faculty in the university (American Association of University Professors [AAUP] position statements) and, more specifically, in composition studies (Schell; Bousquet, Scott, and Parascondola; Miller), the matter of contingent faculty in technical and professional communication (TPC)…
Descriptors: Technical Writing, English Departments, College Faculty, Adjunct Faculty
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Wittman, Emily O.; Windon, Katrina – College English, 2010
The emergent field of translation studies is still struggling to find a home in American universities in a time of severely strained budgets and overextended departments. Drawn to the issue, by the experience of a successful inaugural introductory course at the University of Alabama, these authors have found that a fruitful place for translation…
Descriptors: Universities, English Curriculum, Curriculum Development, English Departments
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Hall, Donald E. – College English, 2011
Many teachers have known of (or been members of) departments in which all of the potentially successful chairs--after having proven themselves by running subunits or graduate programs--have decided to devote themselves solely to research or teaching, and to leave department administration to whoever is willing to do it or whoever can be talked…
Descriptors: Higher Education, English Departments, Department Heads, Administrator Role
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Wilson, Douglas L.; Mailloux, Steven; Johnson, Nan; Stauffer, John; Wolk, Tony; Schilb, John – College English, 2009
2009 is the bicentennial of Abraham Lincoln's birth. Naturally, historians are thrilled. But what about their discipline? Why and how might Lincoln matter to English studies? In this article, the authors reflect on Lincoln and his influence on English studies. They argue that Lincoln has played or can play an important role in the college English…
Descriptors: College English, Historians, English Instruction, Reflection
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Boquet, Elizabeth H.; Lerner, Neal – College English, 2008
Originally published in a 1984 issue of "College English," Stephen North's article "The Idea of a Writing Center" has over the years been much cited in writing center scholarship. Even so, this scholarship as a whole did not proceed to gain much presence in "CE" and other broadly-oriented composition journals. Reconsidering North's piece, the…
Descriptors: College English, Writing (Composition), Laboratories, English Departments
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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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Miller, Thomas – College English, 2006
Traditional priorities of English as a discipline are now significantly at odds with the material circumstances of college English departments. To address these realities, college English needs to become literacy studies rather than literary studies.
Descriptors: College English, Intellectual Disciplines, English Departments, English 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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Bay, Jennifer – College English, 2006
Traditionally, college English departments have resisted granting undergraduate internships a central place in their curricula. Many of these departments do little more than allow students to pursue internships as loosely supervised independent studies. An internship practicum course such as Purdue University's, however, enables students to…
Descriptors: College English, Practicums, Experiential Learning, Internship Programs
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Finke, Laurie; Johnson, Barbara; Leitch, Vincent B.; McGowan, John; Williams, Jeffrey J. – College English, 2003
Literature anthologies are part of the furniture of English departments. Like the putty or gunmetal-gray file cabinet that one might have gotten new or used, they are not a showpiece of academic decor, but it would be hard to imagine work spaces without them. Indeed, they are omnipresent, amassed on the shelves of campus bookstores, weighing down…
Descriptors: Literature Appreciation, Anthologies, English Departments, Literary Criticism