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Gregory Stephens – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2025
"Decolonial refusals" theory, forged through fieldwork in Puerto Rico, is used to question "conceptual disjunctures" in binary views of center-periphery relations. Grad students here are not merely "voices from the margins," as seen from the "imperial north." Their autoethnographies may be dispatches from…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Writing (Composition), Puerto Ricans, Graduate Students
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Emily Jo Schwaller – Composition Studies, 2022
Graduate Student Instructors (GSIs) are often framed as resistant to Writing Pedagogy Education (WPE) (Grouling; Hesse; Reed). Yet, these moments of resistance can (and should be) reframed as acts of well-being, where GSIs are establishing boundaries and identifying their own self-care and needs. I draw on the experiences of five different GSIs in…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Teaching Assistants, Well Being, Resistance (Psychology)
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Abdullah Al Fraidan; Meznah Saud Abdulaziz Alsubaie – Educational Process: International Journal, 2025
Background: This study examines the effect of test anxiety on the academic performance of postgraduate female students, focusing on their perceptions and experiences in open-book exams (OBE) and closed-book exams (CBE). Method: A qualitative case study design was employed using the Thinking Aloud Protocol (TAP) to collect data from five Saudi…
Descriptors: Test Anxiety, Vocabulary, Females, Books
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Yuvayapan, Fatma; Bilginer, Hayriye – Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies, 2020
Academic writing practices constitute central processes through which students learn the conventions of their disciplines to meet the expectations of their academic communities. Therefore, academic writing courses should touch on the specific dimensions of it. One of the most prominent requirements of these courses is to identify the needs of…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Student Needs, Academic Language, Content Area Writing
June, Audrey Williams – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
When professors in positions that offer no chance of earning tenure begin to stack the faculty, campus dynamics start to change. Growing numbers of adjuncts make themselves more visible. They push for roles in governance, better pay and working conditions, and recognition for work well done. And they do so at institutions where tenured faculty,…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Tenure, Job Security, English Departments
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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
Myers, Mandy F. – ProQuest LLC, 2010
Graduate teaching assistants are common fixtures on college campuses, and their roles encompass a wide range of duties, including supervising labs, working alongside mentors, and teaching a variety of beginner courses to students. It is common practice in the field of composition and rhetoric, for example, to employ second year master's students…
Descriptors: Campuses, Qualitative Research, Mentors, Research Universities
Warnick, Chris; Cooney, Emily; Lackey, Samuel – Journal of Basic Writing (CUNY), 2010
This essay discusses our failed attempts at the College of Charleston to sustain a Writing Studio course. Specifically, we explain how the failure of our Studio course revealed underlying problems in the department concerning the formation of writing program policy, the role of adjunct faculty, the oversight of our first-year writing curriculum,…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Adjunct Faculty, Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition)
Morris, Adalaide; And Others – ADE Bulletin, 1995
Presents six responses to an article in the same issue of this journal. Recommends closer contact between baccalaureate institutions and doctoral programs. Expresses a "hope for the new" in the form of more inventive candidates for assistant professorships. States that the conventional admissions process does not work as well for…
Descriptors: Admission Criteria, Doctoral Programs, English Departments, Graduate Students
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Clark, Suzanne – Rhetoric Society Quarterly, 1995
Offers a utopian vision of what the place of rhetoric should be in a department that thinks of itself as literary. Argues that a Ph.D. in English that encompasses both literature and rhetoric works because it is really a degree in rhetoric. (TB)
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, English Departments, Graduate Students, Higher Education
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Olson, Gary A.; Drew, Julie – College English, 1998
Contends that the academy has forgotten the origin of the dissertation and has turned it from a substantive contribution of scholarship to an instrument of evaluation. Argues that continuing to treat the dissertation in this way maintains an unequal power hierarchy of "masters" and initiates--it should be seen as the first serious scholarly…
Descriptors: Doctoral Dissertations, English Departments, Graduate Students, Higher Education
Anderson, Daniel; Atkins, Anthony; Ball, Cheryl; Millar, Krista Homicz; Selfe, Cynthia; Selfe, Richard – Composition Studies, 2006
In recent years, scholars and teachers in both the broad field of Composition Studies and the more specialized arena of Computers and Composition Studies have begun to recognize that the bandwidth of literacy practices and values on which their profession has focused during the last century may be overly narrow. In response, a number of educators…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Surveys, Written Language, Professional Development
Skolnik, Christine – 1995
A graduate teaching assistant who lived through the Northridge quake in Los Angeles County reached some realizations about her habits of thinking in the wake of that experience. As students schooled or even trained in poststructuralist critical theory and/or protocols of postmodern cultural critique, this teaching assistant and some of her…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Earthquakes, English Departments, Graduate Students
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Justman, Stewart – College English, 1975
Alice in Wonderland must be appealed to in order to understand the plight of the young Ph.D. in English. (JH)
Descriptors: Career Ladders, Employment Opportunities, English Departments, Graduate Students
Barr, Marleen – CEA Forum, 1981
Instead of being encouraged to act in a professional manner, graduate students are continually reminded of their professional inferiority by the English department. (HOD)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Educational Attitudes, English Departments, Graduate Students
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