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Don Chapman – Across the Disciplines, 2024
Prescriptive discourse, which favors certain variants over others, like "different from" vs. "different than," has usually been characterized in terms of correctness in spelling, punctuation, word meaning, or grammar. Yet usage guides in the 20th century have added numerous entries that focus more on style considerations than…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Educational History, Language Styles, Spelling
Kristen di Gennaro; Meaghan Brewer – Across the Disciplines, 2024
In this article, we analyze how linguistic terms have been borrowed and reinterpreted across disciplines. Specifically, we describe how terminology associated with Applied Linguistics (AL) changed meaning as it entered the new disciplinary context of Writing Studies (WS), often resulting in confusion and turbulence between the two fields. As in…
Descriptors: Writing Research, Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), Language Variation
Shakil Rabbi; Md Mijanur Rahman – Across the Disciplines, 2024
In this article, two transnational scholars of English studies engage in a collaborative autoethnography to illustrate the generative potential of translingualism as a scholarly common ground for writing studies and the history of English language studies. The argument hinges on the notion that translingualism's open-endedness to, and welcoming…
Descriptors: Writing Research, Multilingualism, English, History
Whicker, John H. – Across the Disciplines, 2022
Transfer-focused pedagogies like Writing about Writing (WAW) or Teaching for Transfer (TFT) have claimed to better facilitate transfer of writing knowledge from first-year composition (FYC) courses. These pedagogies have emerged alongside research indicating that students in upper-level writing intensive courses often do not transfer FYC…
Descriptors: College Students, Freshman Composition, Knowledge Level, Transfer of Training
Hallman Martini, Rebecca – Across the Disciplines, 2022
Drawing on interviews with faculty and administrators across the curriculum, this article argues for a new approach to WAC/WID that I call writing in the professions (WIP). A WIP curriculum emphasizes writing with/for audiences outside the university and in genres that are intended for use beyond the classroom, rather than in simulated genres…
Descriptors: Writing Across the Curriculum, Business Communication, Writing Instruction, Collaborative Writing
Dan Martin – Across the Disciplines, 2024
The invention of composition as a required course in the United States, a booming textbook industry, and an increased focus on nationalism perpetuated the standardizing of English language practices and curriculums in secondary and postsecondary schools in the late 19th century and early 20th century. Composition textbooks circulated both standard…
Descriptors: Nationalism, Writing (Composition), Textbooks, Standard Spoken Usage
J. A. Rice; Trini Stickle – Across the Disciplines, 2024
Comparing legal, policy, and statute writing--from stone records of ancient Britain civil servants to opinions of the U.S. Supreme Court--this article demonstrates how weaving threads of textual language variation and change can innervate writing in the disciplines and history of the English language courses, particularly courses designated for…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Writing Across the Curriculum, Legal Problems, Jargon
Solaire A. Finkenstaedt-Quinn; Jennifer A. Schmidt-McCormack; Field M. Watts; Anne Ruggles Gere; Ginger V. Shultz – Across the Disciplines, 2023
Undergraduate writing fellows play an important role in administering writing assignments in writing-intensive courses. At the University of Michigan, the MWrite program was designed to support the implementation of writing-to-learn (WTL) assignments in STEM courses. Within MWrite, writing fellows are a primary instructional resource for students…
Descriptors: Fellowships, Undergraduate Study, Writing Instruction, Writing Assignments
Deans, Thomas – Across the Disciplines, 2022
This study reports on how a cohort of 16 especially accomplished undergraduate STEM majors narrate their literacy histories, experience learning to write in the sciences during their college years, and reflect on their priorities for writing more generally. These participants report largely positive early schooling experiences with writing;…
Descriptors: Content Area Writing, High Achievement, STEM Education, Majors (Students)
Adrienne Jankens; Clay Walker; Linda Jimenez; Mariel Krupansky; Anna E. Lindner; Anita Mixon; Nicole Guinot Varty – Across the Disciplines, 2023
This article presents the results of a 2021 survey and interview study of faculty teaching writing-intensive (WI) courses across disciplines at an urban research university. We emphasize the need to understand the complexities of instructors' ideologies about teaching writing and their attitudes about student language prior to engaging faculty…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Teacher Attitudes, College Faculty, Faculty Development
Morgan Gresham; Megan Mize; Sarah Zurhellen – Across the Disciplines, 2023
In this article, we explore how members of the Association for Authentic, Experiential, and Evidence-Based Learning's (AAEEBL) Digital Ethics Task Force used their third space discursive expertise to conceptualize Principles for Digital Ethics in ePortfolios and argue that the diversity of their roles is directly responsible for the successful…
Descriptors: Ethics, Electronic Publishing, Portfolios (Background Materials), Writing Instruction
Joseph Anthony Wilson – Across the Disciplines, 2024
This article addresses key issues in WAC/WID regarding translation and biliteracy. Informed by translingual scholarship, genre studies, and history of the English language research, it first defines translation politically and historically, and as always involving negotiations of meaning-making across linguistic repertoires and genres. It then…
Descriptors: Literacy, Writing Across the Curriculum, Content Area Writing, Writing Instruction
Velez, Meghan – Across the Disciplines, 2022
This paper argues that undergraduate peer-to-peer instruction in STEM writing provides valuable insights into the relationship between writing and disciplinary identity. Drawing on observation and interview data from a writing center staffed by undergraduate STEM students, I argue that STEM writing tutors construct disciplinary identities by…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Writing Instruction, Tutors, Identification (Psychology)
Callow, Megan; Dykema, Julie – Across the Disciplines, 2022
Within cross-curricular literacy (CCL) initiatives at colleges and universities, there still remain challenges in preparing and supporting instructors from different disciplinary backgrounds. This small, exploratory study investigates the ways that literacy experiences and disciplinary backgrounds shape the teaching practice of five science…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Teacher Background, Science Instruction, Intellectual Disciplines
Chaterdon, Kate – Across the Disciplines, 2019
According to a growing body of research, fostering a metacognitive awareness of the writing process is integral to the development of strong writers. Writing scholars (e.g., Driscoll & Wells, 2012; Yancey, Robertson, & Taczac, 2014; Gorzelsky, Driscoll, Pazcek, Jones, & Hayes, 2017) suggest that developing this awareness can improve…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Perception, Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition)