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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
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
Winterowd, W. Ross – 1997
Problems of "dialect" exist in the field called "English," which is constituted by both composition and literature. The "ghettoization" of composition has created a hostile underclass, and many compositionists try to "pass" as literarists or at least unconsciously adopt the vocabulary and rhetoric of the…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, English Departments, English Teachers, Higher Education