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ADE Bulletin, 1996
Outlines the Association of Departments of English's position on: (1) the balance between teaching and scholarship in the lives of professors; (2) the use of outside reviewers for personnel decisions; (3) class size and workload for college and university English teachers; and (4) use of part-time and full-time adjunct faculty. (TB)
Descriptors: Accountability, Class Size, Definitions, English Departments
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Peters, Bradley – WPA: Writing Program Administration, 1998
Discusses a process of acculturation in three stages by which fledgling Writing Program Administrators can be transformed into change agents: (1) critically reading the program to locate key allies, potential advocates, and proven adversaries; (2) implementing changes on an infrastructural level to convert positive relations among colleagues into…
Descriptors: Administrative Organization, Cooperative Planning, English Departments, Higher Education
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Holliday, Wendy; Fagerheim, Britt – portal: Libraries and the Academy, 2006
This article details the process of implementing a sequenced information literacy program for two core English composition courses at Utah State University. An extensive needs assessment guided the project, leading to a curriculum design process with the goal of building a foundation for deeper critical thinking skills. The curriculum development…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Curriculum Design, Needs Assessment, Information Literacy
Gradin, Sherrie – 1996
Sweeping reforms within general education have brought radical changes to traditional writing requirements at many institutions around the country, in some cases extending to the elimination of those requirements. At Portland State University (Oregon), writing is now to be the province of those teaching in the new general education program. Many…
Descriptors: Administrative Change, Administrator Role, Educational Change, English Curriculum
Sledd, James – 1996
This paper addresses civic educators on the left, who "babble" about liberation and empowerment by transformative intellectuals. The paper argues that many of those "leftists" belong to the group that could be called "boss" compositionists, comfortable lower managers of a corrupt system, who never tire of denouncing…
Descriptors: Career Ladders, Educational Attitudes, English Departments, Faculty Development
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Stedman, N. Alex, III – College Composition and Communication, 1975
English departments could solve some of their problems by seeking support for their composition programs from the business community.
Descriptors: Business, Business Responsibility, Business Skills, Career Education
Burress, Lee A., Jr. – 1967
As a result of a joint concern over the issues of book selection and censorhip, the National Council of Teachers of English and the American Association of School Librarians distributed a questionnaire in the spring of 1964 to 1,600 secondary schools, half going to chairpersons of English departments and half to school librarians. Approximately…
Descriptors: Censorship, Educational Practices, Educational Research, English Departments
Moxley, Joseph M.; Olson, Gary A. – 1988
To determine how deans as a group perceive the role of the English department chair, a study surveyed the deans of Arts and Sciences of 350 randomly selected universities with enrollments over 10,000 students (with a 51% response rate). The questionnaire solicited data about the tasks and qualities of chairmanship, referring both to specific…
Descriptors: Academic Deans, Administrator Attitudes, Administrator Characteristics, Administrator Effectiveness
Young, Art – 1987
Connections between stereotypical attitudes toward English studies and the apparent lack of integration in curricula and pedagogies make it useful to examine the "process/content debate." Representative voices in this debate have been strident: cultural literacy is paraphrased as expressing that it is not important what can be known, as…
Descriptors: College English, Content Area Writing, Education, English Departments
Terchek, Mary E. – 1988
Placements in English departments' internship programs are problematic when writing opportunities lack range and/or depth, but at the same time students often have excellent internship experiences despite limited writing opportunities. An examination of the designs and assumptions of the writing skills internship program in the English Department…
Descriptors: College English, English Departments, Higher Education, Individual Development
Gilson, Joan T. – 1989
Because of consistent faculty involvement from its earliest stages, the writing assessment program at the University of Missouri at Kansas City (UMKC) represents a competent, fair, and useful procedure for the large-scale testing and evaluation of student writing. UMKC's assessment curriculum builds on the existing sequence of three composition…
Descriptors: College English, Competency Based Education, English Curriculum, English Departments
Meagher, E. M. – 1982
The development of a college writing program can offer many challenges to a program director drawn from the ranks of the English faculty. The discipline of writing, an act of production, is both scorned and clutched by faculty who have been trained to analyze literature, an act of perception. Literature specialists, to be qualified to teach…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, College Faculty, English Curriculum, English Departments
Shohet, Richard M. – 1979
Since public education must compete for public dollars with a range of other services, teachers must learn to present a good image and to create an environment in which their objectives and procedures are immediately obvious to parents, students, and school board members. A high priority for English department chairpersons, therefore, is to teach,…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, English Departments, English Instruction, Language Arts
Lindemann, Erika – 1980
There are three standard complaints given by teachers of freshman composition: (1) college freshman students are inferior to English majors and graduate students, or inferior to freshmen from when the teachers were in college; (2) the subject matter of a writing course is inferior to that of literature courses; and (3) those who teach composition…
Descriptors: College English, College Faculty, College Freshmen, English Departments
Gracie, William J., Jr. – 1981
In the many conferences, workshops, and panels for writing instructors the role of director of freshman English has been routinely ignored. The typical director does not even have a job description. But directors should interpret this lack of specifics to mean that they are not administrators set apart from faculty, but are engaged with faculty in…
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Administrator Role, College English, College Freshmen
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