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Zakery R. Muñoz – College Composition and Communication, 2024
This article shares three focal participant profiles from a national study on graduate student writing pedagogy in rhetoric, composition, and writing studies. Working toward a more linguistically just discipline, this research explores how we might teach graduate students disciplinary genre expectations while centering their embodied ways of…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), Rhetoric
John Raucci – College Composition and Communication, 2021
This article argues composition researchers should make replicating previous research a greater priority because replication is a valuable tool that facilitates invention, collaboration, transparency, and revision, and its overwhelming absence in composition studies narrows the generalizability of writing research. I posit a replication agenda to…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods, Writing Research, Writing (Composition)
Jonathan J. Rylander; Travis Webster – College Composition and Communication, 2020
Framed in three guiding claims about relationships between Writing Across the Curriculum and queer theories, this article offers Jasbir Puar's theory of "queer assemblage" as a model for rearticulating WAC administration.
Descriptors: Writing Across the Curriculum, Social Theories, Sexual Orientation, Writing Instruction
Scott Wible – College Composition and Communication, 2020
Integrating design thinking methodology into writing courses can help students to develop creative approaches to problem definition and solution development. Tracing how students work with and through written genres common to design thinking reveals the possibilities and potential of learning new patterns of inquiry and argumentation. Developing…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Writing Instruction, Creative Thinking, Design
Lindsey Harding; Robby Nadler; Paula Rawlins; Elizabeth Day; Kristen Miller; Kimberly Martin – College Composition and Communication, 2020
Interdisciplinary collaborations to help students compose for discipline-specific contexts draw on multiple expertise. Science, technology, education, and mathematics (STEM) programs particularly rely on their writing colleagues because (1) their academic expertise is often not writing and (2) teaching writing often necessitates a redesigning of…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Content Area Writing, Science Education, Writing Instruction
Regina McManigell Grijalva – College Composition and Communication, 2020
To reveal responsibilities of storytelling, I first disclose my representation of indigeneity, and then, as an indigenous writer, I use the narrative paradigm to examine divergent stories told about the death of Apache Chief Mangas Coloradas. This study demonstrates for teachers and students of writing how important it is to remain ethical in…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Story Telling, American Indians, Authors
Bruce Ballenger; Kelly Myers – College Composition and Communication, 2019
Forty years ago, Nancy Sommers identified dissonance and the ways in which writers respond to incongruities between "intention and execution" as a core competency of revision. While still a challenge for student writers, dissonance now takes different forms, particularly for advanced student writers who embrace theories of revision but…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Revision (Written Composition), Psychological Patterns, Fear
Anne Ruggles Gere; Anne Curzan; J. W. Hammond; Sarah Hughes; Ruth Li; Andrew Moos; Kendon Smith; Kathryn Van Zanen; Kelly L. Wheeler; Crystal J. Zanders – College Composition and Communication, 2021
Critical language awareness offers one approach to communal "justicing," an iterative and collective process that can address inequities in the disciplinary infrastructure of Writing Studies. We demonstrate justicing in the field's pasts, policies, and publications; offer a model of communal revision; and invite readers to become agents…
Descriptors: Metalinguistics, Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), Justice
Keith Rhodes – College Composition and Communication, 2019
A limited mixed-method study revealed that students could alter written style after direct style instruction, but the effect faded quickly. Instead, students reverted to culturally structured intuition to make conscious, contrary choices. Thus, direct instruction in precise forms of style should probably yield to methods that build culturally…
Descriptors: Teaching Styles, Writing Instruction, Writing Skills, Culturally Relevant Education
Chris Mays – College Composition and Communication, 2017
This article uses systems and complexity theory to illustrate key characteristics of writing as a complex system. This illustration reveals how writing works on multiple levels of scale, and adds to the body of theoretical knowledge that can be taught within the discipline of writing studies. In so doing, it shows how a complex systems writing…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction, Writing Teachers, Writing Processes
Peter Wayne Moe – College Composition and Communication, 2018
Epideictic rhetoric reifies and reshapes the shared values of a community, and in this article, I reread William E. Coles Jr.'s "The Plural I" as showing forth a classroom built upon epideictic rhetoric, his own epideictic pedagogy asking that teachers of writing engage student work not expecting to be persuaded but as observers of…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Writing Teachers, Teacher Expectations of Students, Rhetoric
Jeffrey A. Bacha – College Composition and Communication, 2016
Borrowing from rhetorically based theories of usability, this article offers an invention tactic designed to help students understand how mundane features of everyday dwelling places have significant impacts on their educational experiences. Additionally, the offered tactic helps students understand how to craft rhetorical critiques in contexts…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Rhetoric, College English, Writing (Composition)
Shannon Walters – College Composition and Communication, 2018
This article argues for understanding Kenneth Burke's linguistic pedagogy as a teaching practice rooted in the appreciation of disability. It explores connections between the Cold War cultural context and the present day, describing how a nuanced approach to disability pedagogy can resist impulses toward competition and conflict in the classroom…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Cultural Context, Applied Linguistics, Classroom Environment
Jennifer Lin LeMesurier – College Composition and Communication, 2016
This article explores bodily movement practices as a foundational component of rhetorical awareness. Through ethnographic study of dance pedagogy, the author demonstrates how genre uptake is enabled by bodily experience; learned ways of moving produce inclinations toward certain rhetorical pathways over others. Enabling students to uptake new…
Descriptors: Movement Education, Dance Education, Human Body, Rhetoric
Kathleen Blake Yancey; Matthew Davis; Liane Robertson; Kara Taczak; Erin Workman – College Composition and Communication, 2019
Drawing on the Teaching for Transfer (TFT) writing curriculum, this study documents how students in writing courses at four different institutions transferred writing knowledge and practice concurrently into other sites of writing, including other courses, co-curriculars, and workplaces. This research demonstrates that when students, supported by…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), College Students, Transfer of Training, Teaching Methods