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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
Tricia Serviss; Julia Voss – College Composition and Communication, 2019
Theorizing WPA expertise as problem-oriented, stakeholder-inclusive practice, we apply the twenty-first-century paradigm of transdisciplinarity to a campus WID Initiative to read and argue that data-driven research capturing transdisciplinary WPA methods in action will allow us to better understand, represent, and leverage…
Descriptors: Content Area Writing, Writing Across the Curriculum, Writing Instruction, Program Development
Shari J. Stenberg; Debbie Minter – College Composition and Communication, 2018
This essay reports on an interview-based study of ten veteran WPAs, whose three decades of service spans neoliberalism's growing influence on universities. Our findings trace their enactment of social resilience, a dynamic, relational process that allowed them, even in the face of constraint, to act and to preserve key commitments.
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Neoliberalism, Universities, Writing Instruction
Neil Baird; Bradley Dilger – College Composition and Communication, 2017
Report on a longitudinal study of transfer, investigating dispositions in two participants' internships. Prior knowledge helped one student overcome negative attitudes toward school. With less experience and disruptive dispositions, the second student was less successful. Thick descriptions of their experiences are followed by implications for…
Descriptors: Transfer of Training, Student Attitudes, Student School Relationship, Internship Programs
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
Mary Soliday; Jennifer Seibel Trainor – College Composition and Communication, 2016
Drawing from a large qualitative study, we examine how students experience writing in college, focusing on the conditions that allow students to develop their authorship and those that encourage students to experience writing as a process of following rules and regulations. We situate students' perceptions, and the assignments and practices that…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Attitudes, Writing (Composition), Writing Processes
Daveena Tauber – College Composition and Communication, 2016
This article argues that composition should be involved in the study and teaching of graduate level writing. It goes on to argue that independent consulting offers a viable way for compositionists to share expertise with graduate students and programs, as well as to expand opportunities for participation in the profession. While the independent…
Descriptors: Graduate Study, Writing (Composition), Consultants, Writing Instruction
Anne Ruggles Gere; Sarah C. Swofford; Naomi Silver; Melody Pugh – College Composition and Communication, 2015
Examination of the perspectives and experiences of faculty, graduate student instructors, and undergraduates participating in a WAC/WID program shows how discipline-focused WAC/WID principles are often resisted, interrogated, and subverted by all three groups of stakeholders. New disciplinarity, especially its concepts of borderlands and…
Descriptors: Writing Across the Curriculum, Content Area Writing, College Faculty, Undergraduate Students
Sarah Read; Michael J. Michaud – College Composition and Communication, 2015
This article connects the pedagogy of the multimajor professional writing (MMPW) course with two important contemporary discussions in composition studies: the pedagogy called writing about writing (WAW) and the conversation about the transferability of rhetorical knowledge from school to work. We argue that the capaciousness of the WAW approach…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, College Faculty, Writing (Composition), Writing Across the Curriculum
Faye Halpern – College Composition and Communication, 2015
We in composition studies have countered the suspicion that what we do is "simplistic in method and impoverished in content" by insisting on our own disciplinary expertise, an insistence that has gained us administrative support and, arguably, better working conditions. Yet this article explores a problem that arose for the author as a…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Intellectual Disciplines, Expertise, Interprofessional Relationship
Condon, William; Rutz, Carol – College Composition and Communication, 2012
Early status reports on WAC call for engagement with the disciplines, robust research about writing, and a transformation from missionary work to a more wide-ranging model. A Taxonomy of WAC describes common characteristics of WAC programs as well as organizing those characteristics into a progression from initiation to change agency. (Contains 1…
Descriptors: Taxonomy, Writing Across the Curriculum, Educational Development, Writing Research
Thaiss, Chris; Porter, Tara – College Composition and Communication, 2010
As writing across the curriculum (WAC) has matured and diversified as a concept and as an organizational structure in U.S. higher education, there has arisen a need for accurate, up-to-date information on the presence and characteristics of WAC and writing-in-the-disciplines (WID) programs. Following on the only previous nationwide survey of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Writing Across the Curriculum, Incidence
Jeyaraj, Joseph – College Composition and Communication, 2009
During colonial times, various British Indian educational institutions and practices, including writing pedagogies at these institutions, introduced modernity to British India. This essay explains the manner in which some students internalized modernity and in their writings used modernist beliefs and premises to critique some precolonial Indian…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Schools, Writing Instruction, Writing Across the Curriculum
Melzer, Dan – College Composition and Communication, 2009
In this essay I present the results of a national study of over 2,000 writing assignments from college courses across disciplines. Drawing on James Britton's multidimensional discourse taxonomy and recent work in genre studies, I analyze the rhetorical features and genres of the assignments and consider the significance of my findings through the…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Writing Across the Curriculum, Audiences, Writing Instruction
Kutney, Joshua P. – College Composition and Communication, 2007
In this article, the author offers his critiques on Downs and Wardle's course, Introduction to Writing Studies. Downs and Wardle use their course to alert students to the very misconceptions that prompt the shift from "teaching writing" to "teaching about writing"--namely the inability of first-year composition courses to make good on the pledge…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Freshman Composition, Misconceptions, Writing Instruction