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Anna Santucci; Annemarie Vaccaro – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2024
This chapter draws upon duoethnographic methodology to invite readers into conversation about the complexity and importance of centering positionality in the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL). We suggest that self-reflection towards positional awareness fosters ethically rooted, authentic SoTL practice, and offer related considerations…
Descriptors: Self Evaluation (Individuals), Reflection, Scholarship, Personality Traits
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Rhodes, Christy M.; Lin, Xi – Journal of Faculty Development, 2019
The use of collaborative writing partnerships is frequently cited as an effective strategy to increase the productivity and quality of academic writing (Austin & Baldwin, 1991). However, developing and utilizing these relationships effectively can prove challenging to early-career academics. This article used Boud, Keogh, and Walker's (1985)…
Descriptors: Collaborative Writing, Teaching Methods, Academic Language, Beginning Teachers
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Alston, Christina; Mirghassemi, Fatemeh; Gist, Conra D. – Multicultural Perspectives, 2022
Scholarly writing is traditionally written and reviewed with a positivist mindset, based on ideas of universal truths that typically remove subjectivisms, cultural experiences, and marginalized voices from the writing process. Writing in this manner fails to recognize how the societal and internalized ideas of white dominance can negatively…
Descriptors: Academic Language, Writing Instruction, Writing Processes, Minority Groups
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Cook-Sather, Alison; Abbot, Sophia; Felten, Peter – Teaching & Learning Inquiry, 2019
In a classic 2010 article, Craig Nelson critiques his own previously held "dysfunctional illusions of rigor" that for years had constrained his teaching. He demonstrates that certain "rigorous" pedagogical practices disadvantage rather than support learners, and he argues for an expansion of what counts as legitimate…
Descriptors: Reflection, Writing (Composition), Academic Standards, Difficulty Level