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Bennett, Kristin C. – Composition Studies, 2021
Circulated documents, like mission statements, demarcate normative boundaries related to student and instructor identities, behaviors, and experiences. In attempting to create inclusive documentation, universities frequently use standardizing language. While promoting standardization, however, such documents may prove exclusive by disregarding a…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Social Bias, Discourse Analysis, Position Papers
Milson-Whyte, Vivette; Oenbring,, Raymond; Jaquette, Brianne – Composition Studies, 2021
The title for this article reflects the complex linguistic situation of the Anglophone Caribbean, where multiple English-lexifier Creoles (such as Jamaican Creole [Weh Wi Deh] and Bahamian Creole [Veh Vi Is])--all of which developed in the colonial era out of the contact between English and myriad African languages spoken by contemporary Caribbean…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English, Creoles, African Languages
Maria Conti Maravillas – Composition Studies, 2023
Positioned at the crucial point of access to higher education, summer bridge programs often serve students of color and multilingual learners as well as first-generation and low-income students. Bridge programs, which frequently include first year composition courses, represent an underexplored entry point for collaborations between academic and…
Descriptors: Summer Programs, Cultural Background, Minority Group Students, English Language Learners
Horner, Bruce; Tetreault, Laura – Composition Studies, 2016
This article explores translation as a useful point of departure and framework for taking a translingual approach to writing engaging globalization. Globalization and the knowledge economy are putting renewed emphasis on translation as a key site of contest between a dominant language ideology of monolingualism aligned with fast capitalist…
Descriptors: Translation, Multilingualism, Code Switching (Language), Literacy
Cavazos, Alyssa G. – Composition Studies, 2019
First-Year Writing (fyw) courses are ideal writing spaces where students' diverse identities and language resources can flourish for specific rhetorical purposes. While research has focused on multilingual students' language and writing practices, little attention has focused on self-identified multilingual students' perceptions of language…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Multilingualism, Self Concept, Writing (Composition)
Alexander, Kara Poe – Composition Studies, 2015
The literacy narrative assignment is popular with composition instructors because of the reflection it encourages in students. Previously, scholars have claimed that students demonstrate reflection in literacy narratives when they critique dominant ideologies. Largely absent, however, is research on what other elements might indicate reflection…
Descriptors: Literacy Education, Assignments, Figurative Language, Teaching Methods
Lockett, Alexandria; Walker, Sarah Rude – Composition Studies, 2016
Intensified visibility of racialized violence in the United States, as it relates to policing and the criminal justice system, raises questions about the purpose and application of higher education. College students all over the world attend school within a striking global portrait of antiracist protest occurring on social media, on their…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Institutional Characteristics, College Students, Social Media
Pantelides, Kate; Bartesaghi, Mariaelena – Composition Studies, 2012
The encounters of writing center tutors and clients, this essay argues, are tensional, asymmetrical, and productive negotiations of a coauthored "we". As authorship and authorization are discursive processes, we offer an empirical examination of how personal pronouns mark important shifts in the dynamic creation of a shared academic manuscript in…
Descriptors: Tutoring, Writing (Composition), Authors, Language Usage