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Harvey J. Graff – Across the Disciplines, 2024
Scholarly disciplines are historical reservoirs riven with contradictions. Often unaware of their own history, the humanities lead in complications, with English departments outpacing other fields of study. Both writing and English language and literature studies exhibit long-standing omissions and conflicts. This essay explores their similarities…
Descriptors: Reading, Writing (Composition), Educational History, Humanities
Street, Nathaniel – Composition Studies, 2020
A unique line of WPA scholarship highlights the bodily, mental, and emotional toll of administering writing programs, which has prompted analysis of the institutional mechanisms that produce frustration in WPA work. Writing programs are comprised of a wide range of (non)human institutional forces in often incoherent and unsustainable ways, which…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Program Administration, Writing (Composition), Laboratories
Pong-ampai Kongcharoen; Jiraporn Dhanarattigannon; Tirote Thongnuan – PASAA: Journal of Language Teaching and Learning in Thailand, 2024
This study aimed to investigate the lexical competence of English-major EFL students. The learner corpus comprised 552 pieces of writing by sophomore English majors during five academic years between 2017 and 2021, containing 190,506words in total. The results from Vocab Profile program showed that these students used words contained in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English Departments, Writing Assignments, Majors (Students)
Wing Yee Jenifer Ho – ELT Journal, 2024
Digital multimodal composing (DMC) allows students to mobilize a wide range of multimodal resources to make meaning. While studies in DMC tended to focus on language-learning contexts, few of them examine its use in content-based courses whereby students are proficient L2 users expected to demonstrate understanding of abstract concepts using DMC.…
Descriptors: Universities, College English, Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition)
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
Elizabeth Kalbfleisch, Editor; Matthew Abraham, Editor – College Composition and Communication, 2016
This symposium brings together a range of scholars to consider what economic forces have driven the development of independent writing programs, and how such programs are susceptible to economic conditions and pressures, perhaps even more so than neighboring disciplines in the humanities. It includes: (1) "Documents of Dissent: Hairston's…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction, English Departments, Program Development
Anicca Cox; Timothy R. Dougherty; Seth Kahn; Michelle LaFrance; Amy Lynch-Biniek – College Composition and Communication, 2016
Since the adoption and subsequent fade of the Wyoming Resolution, we have seen the political economy of writing instruction change remarkably. Certainly, composition studies' disciplinary viability seems more solid, but the proportion of contingent writing teachers has increased to almost 70 percent. The authors of this article attribute these…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction, Writing Teachers, Educational Trends
Combs, Stephen M. – Academic Leadership Journal in Student Research, 2016
The search for a common model of instruction in first-year composition began in the 1960s when composition first began to separate from literature in college English departments. Because writing is essentially a methods course with no standard curriculum as one might find in physics or economics, common model has been elusive. A sign that…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Open Enrollment, Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction
Beasley, James – Journal of General Education, 2012
Henry W. Sams served on the editorial boards of "College English," "College Composition and Communication," and the "Journal of General Education." He was able to influence the kinds of articles on composition and rhetoric being published throughout this period, and he and his colleagues increased broad awareness of…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Writing (Composition), General Education, Journal Articles
Loughman, Kyle Sean – ProQuest LLC, 2012
Currently, two-year colleges are teaching the lion's share of college composition classes, mainly consisting of developmental writing and first-year composition courses; however, those same two-year colleges have been slow in embracing the composition theory and practices that are studied and implemented at four-year colleges. One way to…
Descriptors: Two Year Colleges, Writing Instruction, Writing Teachers, Administrators
Sturgeon, Carolyn – CEA Forum, 2013
Teaching service courses such as the first year composition courses and an introduction to literature is often a primary mission for English departments on campuses in the United States. Sometimes specific departments request specialized additional English classes such as Writing for Business, basic grammar courses, composition courses focused for…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Literature, Writing (Composition), College Freshmen
Hanstedt, Paul – Liberal Education, 2012
Changing a curriculum is already stressful enough without finding new ways to create anxiety, discontent, and rancor. To provide a truly integrated liberal education, the author contends that educators must not only change their curricula--the courses they offer--but they must change what they do in the classroom, the kinds of papers and…
Descriptors: General Education, Student Needs, Speech Communication, Educational Change
Rabab'ah, Ghaleb – Turkish Online Journal of Distance Education, 2013
This study explores the discourse generated by English as a foreign language (EFL) learners using synchronous computer-mediated communication (CMC) as an approach to help English language learners to create social interaction in the classroom. It investigates the impact of synchronous CMC mode on the quantity of total words, lexical range and…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Computer Mediated Communication, Gender Differences
English Departments' Relationships to Community: An Experiment at the Heart of Disciplinary Identity
Duffey, Suellynn – Journal of Public Scholarship in Higher Education, 2011
English departments is not uniform. Many departments still exist with traditional notions of inquiry and curriculum and ignore community engagement or understand it in narrow ways. For a variety of reasons, writing courses and compositionists more easily than literature scholars and creative writers can embrace current concepts of community…
Descriptors: English Departments, School Community Relationship, Graduate Students, Seminars
Ianetta, Melissa – College Composition and Communication, 2010
This essay argues that a trend in histories of literary and writing studies is to bifurcate the origins of the fields and so engage in those modernist narrative fallacies described by Jean-Francois Lyotard. Such works limit our understanding of past practices and the longstanding connections between disciplinarity and labor. (Contains 2 notes.)
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Labor, Educational History, Literature