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Showing 1 to 15 of 65 results Save | Export
Lloyd-Jones, Richard – ADE Bulletin, 2002
Suggests reasons that Robert Scholes is an ideal person to receive the Francis Andrew March Award. Discusses aspects of his career that are not automatically clear from his publications. Concentrates on his professional presence for over more than a third of a century. (SG)
Descriptors: English Departments, Higher Education, Teacher Attitudes, Undergraduate Students
Scholes, Robert – ADE Bulletin, 2002
Shares some things about the author's career in the English profession, in a confessional mode. Notes that as a profession in a highly competitive and commodified society, educators encourage "hypocriticism"--intellectual bluff and bluster, self-promotion and one-upmanship. Recounts some episodes from an academic life of "lazy idle little…
Descriptors: English Departments, English Instruction, Higher Education, Teacher Attitudes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Locker, Kitty O. – Business Communication Quarterly, 2003
Reviews the growth of business and technical communication courses as college courses in universities. Documents the move to "professional" communication in English departments. Explains why technical communication dominates "professional" communication. Argues that faculty who teach business communication in business schools…
Descriptors: Business Education, Curriculum Development, English Departments, Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
MacNealy, Mary Sue; Heaton, Leon B. – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 1999
Surveys technical writing professors concerning the definition and location of technical writing programs. Finds that programs located in English departments do not receive the respect and support they need; and that faculty in programs located in other departments are significantly more satisfied. Suggests some strategies for improving the…
Descriptors: College Faculty, English Departments, Higher Education, Interprofessional Relationship
Boehm, Beth A. – ADE Bulletin, 2001
Focuses on a survey of 10 questions that the author gave to all tenured and tenure-track faculty members in English at the University of Louisville. Notes that the questions focused on the perceived positive and negative results of a major cultural change (faculty teaching first-year composition) for the department, the composition program, the…
Descriptors: English Departments, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Organizational Change
Austin, Timothy R. – ADE Bulletin, 1997
Describes how the English Department at Loyola University of Chicago, adopted assessment measures beneficial to the department's program and acceptable to administrators, faculty, and students. (TB)
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, English Departments, Evaluation Methods, Higher Education
Savage, Mary C. – ADE Bulletin, 1989
Describes "academentia," the delusion that disciplines are intellectually powerful as a result of their specialization. Prescribes "neighborliness"--intellectual and practical work done from the perspective of critical consciousness--as the antidote to academentia. Suggests that writing projects have great potential as…
Descriptors: College English, English Departments, Higher Education, Politics of Education
Rector, Liam – ADE Bulletin, 1989
Describes the distinction between the National Endowment for the Arts, which funds artists, and the National Endowment for the Humanities, which funds those who talk about art. Examines the similar distinction in alliances between writers and scholars in English departments, focusing on their effects on writing programs. (MM)
Descriptors: College English, English Departments, Higher Education, Politics of Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Ferguson, Mary Anne – College English, 1971
A reply directed to George Gleason's The Job Market for Women: A Department Chairman's View," which appears on pp. 927-30 of this issue. (RD)
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Employment Potential, English Departments, Graduate Study
Winterowd, W. Ross – ADE Bulletin, 1980
Argues that a paradox exists in humanities departments when such departments, which are the custodians and beneficiaries of literacy, fail to concern themselves with reading, writing, and pedagogy. (DF)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Educational Policy, English Departments, Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Yaffe, David – Lingua Franca: the review of academic life, 1999
Recounts the rapid rise and recent decline of the once highly regarded Duke University (North Carolina) English department, characterized by disaffection and defection to other institutions of a large proportion of the faculty, disorganized teaching, and an unsettled curriculum. The perceptions of a number of the faculty involved are presented.…
Descriptors: College Administration, College Environment, College Faculty, English Departments
Vandenberg, Peter – 1994
By the late 19th century, the new universities in the United States had become so closely intertwined with the research imperative that their future depended on their position at the center of knowledge creation. The tension between the liberal arts college and the "modern" research university initiated a process of differentiation that…
Descriptors: English Departments, Higher Education, Professional Recognition, Research
Jolly, Peggy – 1998
Within the academy the commonly held definition of plagiarism--using another's words, ideas, or stylistic individuality without attribution--is widespread, appearing on most English course syllabi. Judicial guidelines are followed: neither stealing nor ignorance of the law is to be sanctioned. Furthermore, penalties for students can be severe: a…
Descriptors: Administrators, College Faculty, English Departments, Ethics
White, Andrea; Wright, Lynn Marie – Writing Instructor, 1988
Asserts that exploring convergences between composition and literature can bridge the gap between the two fields. (MM)
Descriptors: College English, English Curriculum, English Departments, English Instruction
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