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Tessa Brown – College Composition and Communication, 2020
In this article, the author uses storytelling to retell moments in the history of our field. Using personal anecdote alongside critical race theory and critical whiteness studies, she critiques the Writing About Writing movement by re-situating it in history: first narrating it as a contemporary of the Translingualism movement, and then comparing…
Descriptors: Multilingualism, Educational History, Writing Instruction, Writing Skills
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Bonnie J. Williams-Farrier – College Composition and Communication, 2017
Code-switching pedagogies do not consider that some features of African American Verbal Tradition (AVT) are rhetorically effective mainstream communication structures in academic writing. My research asserts that when teaching language/ dialect difference in majority white school settings, contrastive analysis techniques such as these may have…
Descriptors: Code Switching (Language), Black Dialects, Dialect Studies, Language Variation
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Ira Allen, Editor; Elizabeth A. Flynn, Editor – College Composition and Communication, 2016
This symposium, "Barack Obama's Significance for Rhetoric and Composition," aims to provoke and renew disciplinary conversations about the meaning of an age now nearly past, as well as to pose questions that resonate for presidential rhetoric generally. It includes: (1) "Obama's Rhetoric: Black Talk Flow, White Folk Fluent"…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Rhetoric, Political Candidates, Elections
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Perryman-Clark, Staci M. – College Composition and Communication, 2013
For the past few decades, composition researchers have devoted critical attention to studying the ways that African American students employ Africanized linguistic and rhetorical patterns successfully in expository writing situations. More recently, research has focused on the use of African-based rhetorical patterns, since the use of African…
Descriptors: African American Students, Writing Assignments, Language Patterns, Black Dialects
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Lamos, Steve – College Composition and Communication, 2009
This article argues that mid-1970s discourses of literacy crisis prompted a problematic shift toward color-blind ideologies of language and literacy within both disciplinary and institutional discussions of writing instruction for "high-risk" minority students. It further argues that this shift has continuing import for contemporary…
Descriptors: Ideology, Literacy, Minority Groups, Race
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Gilyard, Keith – College Composition and Communication, 1999
Intends to trace a line of thought from early rhetoricians and scholars to contemporary researchers, thinkers, and practitioners that both emphasizes critical pedagogy and values Black culture, especially its vernacular language. Concludes that there was always an African-American contribution to the field of composition in some way or another.…
Descriptors: Black Culture, Black Dialects, Black Literature, Higher Education
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Marback, Richard – College Composition and Communication, 2001
Argues that the responses to the Oakland, California ebonics resolution miss what made the resolution so significant while also making debate about it so intractable. Proposes that compositionists who acknowledge attitudes that made the resolution so significant can productively engage the larger public regarding literacy education in a racially…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Democratic Values, Higher Education, Individual Differences
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Miller, Keith D. – College Composition and Communication, 2004
Using Burkean theory, I claim that Malcolm X brilliantly exposed the rhetoric and epistemology of whiteness as he rejected the African American jeremiad--a dominant form of African American oratory for more than 150 years. Whiteness theory served as the basis for Malcolm X's alternative literacy, which raises important questions that literacy…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Whites, African Americans, Nontraditional Education
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College Composition and Communication, 1984
Presents four essays disagreeing with Farrell's efforts to refute Arthur R. Jensen's genetic explanation of Blacks' lower scores on IQ tests. Presents Farrell's response to these essays. (HTH)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Education, Cultural Differences, Genetics
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Sharpe, Johnnie M. – College Composition and Communication, 1972
Discusses the language problems of America's culturally disadvantaged, explains the process of acculturation, and suggests changes in English instruction for these groups. (SP)
Descriptors: Acculturation, Black Dialects, Culture Conflict, Disadvantaged
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Wible, Scott – College Composition and Communication, 2006
This essay examines a Brooklyn College-based research collective that placed African American languages and cultures at the center of the composition curriculum. Recovering such pedagogies challenges the perception of the CCCC's 1974 "Students' Right to Their Own Language" resolution as a progressive theory divorced from the everyday…
Descriptors: Curriculum Research, Writing Instruction, African Americans, Black Dialects
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Marzluf, Phillip P. – College Composition and Communication, 2006
Though diversity serves as a valuable source for rhetorical inquiry, expressivist instructors who privilege diversity writing may also overemphasize the essential authenticity of their students' vernaculars. This romantic and salvationist impulse reveals the troubling implications of eighteenth-century Natural Language Theory and may,…
Descriptors: Student Diversity, Linguistic Performance, Language Patterns, Linguistic Theory
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Ball, Arnetha; Lardner, Ted – College Composition and Communication, 1997
Summarizes the Ann Arbor "Black English" court case, focusing on teacher attitudes, knowledge, and practice. Argues that three distinct constructs of teacher knowledge are evident in writing studies today. Concludes that pedagogical theory in composition needs to more adequately address questions of language diversity and race to affect…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Classroom Environment, Court Litigation, Elementary Secondary Education
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Kelly, Lou – College Composition and Communication, 1974
If we want monority students to be able to speak out effectively for their rights, we must teach them, without destroying their own voices, to use language that cannot be labeled substandard. (JH)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, College Students, Editing, Grammar
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Pixton, William H. – College Composition and Communication, 1974
While a student's intimate speech is his own business; not teaching him to speak and write standard English will seriously handicap him in his future life. (JH)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, College Students, Language Standardization, Linguistics
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