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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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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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Booth, Wayne C. – College English, 1981
Satirizes college English instruction, specifically "catchy" composition programs and the relevant grant awards and job placement of graduate students. (JM)
Descriptors: College English, English Curriculum, English Departments, English Instruction
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Olson, Gary A.; Drew, Julie – College English, 1998
Contends that the academy has forgotten the origin of the dissertation and has turned it from a substantive contribution of scholarship to an instrument of evaluation. Argues that continuing to treat the dissertation in this way maintains an unequal power hierarchy of "masters" and initiates--it should be seen as the first serious scholarly…
Descriptors: Doctoral Dissertations, English Departments, Graduate Students, Higher Education
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Clayton, John J. – College English, 1981
Presents reasons for interested undergraduates to major in English and points out useful skills developed by English majors. Emphasizes the importance of English department involvement in the career planning of its students, and details the steps undertaken by the University of Massachusetts English department to help its students. (JM)
Descriptors: Career Planning, College English, College Students, English Departments
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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
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Gregory, Marshall – College English, 1997
Argues that students offer English departments a way of bypassing the tangle of theoretical disagreements and of gluing the fragmented pieces of the discipline back together again. Proposes that agreeing about principles of pedagogy is more urgent than agreeing about literary theory. Argues that English departments need to at least agree about…
Descriptors: Coherence, Differences, English Departments, English Instruction
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Laurence, Patricia; And Others – College English, 1993
Provides responses by various scholars to two articles on teaching conflict and struggle and its relevance to the field of basic writing published in the December 1992 issue of "College English." (HB)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Conflict, English Departments, English Instruction
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France, Alan W. – College English, 2000
Argues that both composition and literary studies have a common pedagogical vocation and that by harvesting some very general insights from two decades of cultural critique, English departments can develop curricula that will resolve a good deal of the conflict between literature and composition and improve instruction in both. (SC)
Descriptors: Conflict Resolution, Curriculum Development, English Curriculum, English Departments
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Bloom, Lynn Z. – College English, 1992
Traces the difficulties and exploitation encountered by a female faculty member beginning in the 1950s. Describes how personal voice is frustrated by the hegemonic powers of English departments and the exploitative system of part-time and untenured faculty. Concludes with a powerful affirmation of the teaching mission. (HB)
Descriptors: College English, English Departments, Faculty College Relationship, Females
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Mahala, Daniel; Swilky, Jody – College English, 1997
Argues that the practices of English studies are defined not only by the obvious variety of objects and methods of inquiry but also by competing divisions of service. Calls for a reconfiguration of the geography of the discipline's service functions with the goal of developing new ways of reaching extra-disciplinary student and community…
Descriptors: Access to Education, English Departments, Higher Education, Intellectual Disciplines
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Hatlen, Burton – College English, 1988
Argues that the interaction among the various sub-discourses that collectively constitute English as a discipline can keep alive a vision of English teachers not simply as critics, composition people, or even poets, but as men and women of letters. (RAE)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Discourse Modes, English Departments, English Literature
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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
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