Class in the Composition Classroom

Class in the Composition Classroom
Author: Genesea M. Carter
Publisher: University Press of Colorado
Total Pages: 370
Release: 2017-12-01
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 1607326183

Class in the Composition Classroom considers what college writing instructors should know about their working-class students—their backgrounds, experiences, identities, learning styles, and skills—in order to support them in the classroom, across campus, and beyond. In this volume, contributors explore the nuanced and complex meaning of “working class” and the particular values these college writers bring to the classroom. The real college experiences of veterans, rural Midwesterners, and trade unionists show that what it means to be working class is not obvious or easily definable. Resisting outdated characterizations of these students as underprepared and dispensing with a one-size-fits-all pedagogical approach, contributors address how region and education impact students, explore working-class pedagogy and the ways in which it can reify social class in teaching settings, and give voice to students’ lived experiences. As community colleges and universities seek more effective ways to serve working-class students, and as educators, parents, and politicians continue to emphasize the value of higher education for students of all financial and social backgrounds, conversations must take place among writing instructors and administrators about how best to serve and support working-class college writers. Class in the Composition Classroom will help writing instructors inside and outside the classroom prepare all their students for personal, academic, and professional communication. Contributors: Aaron Barlow, ​Cori Brewster, ​Patrick Corbett, ​Harry Denny, Cassandra Dulin, ​Miriam Eisenstein Ebsworth, ​Mike Edwards, ​Rebecca Fraser, ​Brett Griffiths, ​Anna Knutson, ​Liberty Kohn, ​Nancy Mack, ​Holly Middleton, ​Robert Mundy, ​Missy Nieveen Phegley, ​Jacqueline Preston, ​James E. Romesburg, ​Edie-Marie Roper, Aubrey Schiavone, Christie Toth, ​Gail G. Verdi

Mutuality in the Rhetoric and Composition Classroom

Mutuality in the Rhetoric and Composition Classroom
Author: David Wallace
Publisher: SIU Press
Total Pages: 185
Release: 2000-09-15
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 0809390965

In Mutuality in the Rhetoric and Composition Classroom, David L. Wallace and Helen Rothschild Ewald point out the centrality of rhetoric in the academy, asserting the intimate connection between language and knowledge making. They also stress the need for a change in the roles of teachers and students in today’s classroom. Their goal is mutuality, a sharing of authority among teachers and students in the classroom that would allow everyone an equal voice in the communication of ideas. Arguing that the impetus to empower students by engaging them in liberatory and emancipatory pedagogies is simply not enough, Wallace and Ewald seek to “help readers identify, theorize, and work through problems faced by teachers who already value alternative approaches but who are struggling to implement them in the classroom." It is not the teacher’s job merely to convey a received body of knowledge, nor is knowledge a prepackaged commodity to be delivered by the teacher. It is “constituted in the classroom through the dialogic interaction between teachers and students alike.” Wallace and Ewald see mutuality as potentially transformative, but they “do not believe that the nature or that transformation can be designated in advance.” Rather it is located in the interaction between teachers and students. Wallace and Ewald look at how the transformative notion of mutuality can be effected in classrooms in three important ways: reconstituting classroom speech genres, redesigning the architecture of rhetoric and writing courses, and valuing students’ interpretive agency in classroom discourse. Mutuality in alternative pedagogy, they assert, is neither a single approach nor a specific set of valued practices; it is a continuous collaboration between teachers and students.

Beyond the Frontier

Beyond the Frontier
Author: Jill Dahlman
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 250
Release: 2015-10-05
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 144388393X

Beyond the Frontier: Innovations in First-Year Composition is a compilation of the latest research in first-year composition presented at, and inspired by, the Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association’s “Beyond the Frontier” panels. The book is divided similarly into panels, with the editors having collected a sampling of the composition practices that will stand the test of time. The purpose of the book is to present the reader with innovative methods and techniques for incorporation into the first-year composition classroom, or simply to provide food for thought – passing the torch, as it were – so that new research can be conducted and new findings disseminated. The division of the book mimics the panels one would typically find on a particular day during the Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association Conference, providing the reader with a taste of what it’s like to be in the room with first-year composition scholars.

Teaching College Composition

Teaching College Composition
Author: William Murdick
Publisher: Jain Publishing Company
Total Pages: 149
Release: 2013-08
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0875731058

Composition directors often have little time to prepare new instructors in methods of teaching writing and to forewarn them of the many daily problems that arise in this challenging work. Teaching College Composition, which can be read in a weekend, goes a long way toward meeting those ends. It provides information on twenty-six topics, from issues of class conduct to methods of critiquing papers to ways of evaluating student work. It also provides approaches to six of the most common writing assignments in first-year composition. Teaching College Composition can also serve as a supplemental text for a teaching of writing course, providing an element of "street knowledge" to the theoretical content.

Composition in the Classroom

Composition in the Classroom
Author: Jackie Wiggins
Publisher: R&L Education
Total Pages: 60
Release: 1990
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9780940796836

Presents various techniques for teaching children skills to compose music under limited teacher guidance. The specific approaches examined are teacher-guided composition, small group composition, and individual composition.

Reading in the Writing Room

Reading in the Writing Room
Author: Mckenzi M. Monday
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2022
Genre:
ISBN:

In a time of departmental shifting, it is imperative that our English departments consider how we shape the curriculum of our composition classes to positively affect the abilities of our students to critically read, think, and write. In the creation and implementation of strategies that engage out students and make them more excited to write, we can send college students out into the world who will be more confident in their writing abilities. In spaces that encourage class themes, implementation of literary approaches may be able to affect student engagement with text by ensuring they develop an understanding while reading and create meaning as they respond. Using Rosenblatt's Theory of Transaction and Carillo's strategies of classroom transfer may help our instructors consider the relationships our students have with texts, and it may help students understand the reactions they have to what they read and how they respond to it. Literary approaches in these classroom spaces could provide framework for students to understand the class themes more deeply as they prepare to read and respond in turn. What follows contains an examination of literary approaches and themes presented to an ENG 200 class at the University of Dayton and a conversation about further research that could be done using literary approaches.

Vision, Rhetoric, and Social Action in the Composition Classroom

Vision, Rhetoric, and Social Action in the Composition Classroom
Author: Kristie S. Fleckenstein
Publisher: SIU Press
Total Pages: 213
Release: 2009-11-16
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 0809386887

In this innovative volume, Kristie S. Fleckenstein explores how the intersection of vision, rhetoric, and writing pedagogy in the classroom can help students become compassionate citizens who participate in the world as they become more critically aware of the world. Fleckenstein argues that all social action—behavior designed to increase human dignity, value, and quality of life—depends on a person’s repertoire of visual and rhetorical habits. To develop this repertoire in students, the author advocates the incorporation of visual habits—or ways of seeing—into a language-based pedagogical approach in the writing classroom. According to Fleckenstein, interweaving the visual and rhetorical in composition pedagogy enables students to more readily perceive the need for change, while arming them with the abilities and desire to enact it. The author addresses social action from the perspective of three visual habits: spectacle, which fosters disengagement; animation, or fusing body with meaning; and antinomy, which invites the invention of new realities. Fleckenstein then examines the ways in which particular visual habits interact with rhetorical habits and with classroom methods, resulting in the emergence of various forms of social action. To enhance the understanding of the concepts she discusses, the author represents the intertwining relationships of vision, rhetoric, and writing pedagogy graphically as what she calls symbiotic knots. In tracing the modes of social action privileged by a visual habit and a teacher’s pedagogical choices, Fleckenstein attends particularly to the experiences of students who have been traditionally barred from participation in the public sphere because of gender, race, or class. The book culminates in a call for visually and rhetorically robust writing pedagogies. In Vision, Rhetoric, and Social Action in the Composition Classroom, Fleckenstein combines classic methods of rhetorical teaching with fresh perspectives to provide a unique guide for initiating important improvements in teaching social action. The result is a remarkable volume that empowers teachers to best inspire students to take part in their world at that most crucial moment when they are discovering it.

Claiming Knowledge

Claiming Knowledge
Author: L. M. Thomas
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2008
Genre: College teachers
ISBN:

"Since English composition classes are rich in reading, language, dialogue, and writing, they offer the perfect venue in which to provide women and members of disadvantaged classes the opportunity to have their voices acknowledged"--Abstract.

First Time Up

First Time Up
Author: Brock Dethier
Publisher: University Press of Colorado
Total Pages: 349
Release: 2008-09-30
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0874215218

"First time up?"—an insider’s friendly question from 1960s counter-culture—perfectly captures the spirit of this book. A short, supportive, practical guide for the first-time college composition instructor, the book is upbeat, wise but friendly, casual but knowledgeable (like the voice that may have introduced you to certain other firsts). With an experiential focus rather than a theoretical one, First Time Up will be a strong addition to the newcomer’s professional library, and a great candidate for the TA practicum reading list. Dethier, author of The Composition Instructor’s Survival Guide and From Dylan to Donne, directly addresses the common headaches, nightmares, and epiphanies of composition teaching—especially the ones that face the new teacher. And since legions of new college composition teachers are either graduate instructors (TAs) or adjuncts without a formal background in composition studies, he assumes these folks as his primary audience. Dethier’s voice is casual, but it conveys concern, humor, experience, and reassurance to the first-timer. He addresses all major areas that graduate instructors or new adjuncts in a writing program are sure to face, from career anxiety to thoughts on grading and keeping good classroom records. Dethier’s own eclecticism is well-represented here, but he reviews with considerable deftness the value of contemporary scholarship to first-time writing instructors—many of whom will be impatient with high theory. Throughout the work, he affirms a humane, confident approach to teaching, along with a true affection for college students and for teachers just learning to deal with them.

Writing for College and Beyond

Writing for College and Beyond
Author: Charlotte Kent
Publisher: Peter Lang Incorporated, International Academic Publishers
Total Pages: 238
Release: 2019
Genre: College students
ISBN: 9781433147227

Writing for College and Beyond: Life Lessons from the College Composition Classroom introduces the practical ways that the basic skills taught in the Freshman Composition course apply to the work place and in life. The composition class is a pre-requisite and General Education course for most colleges and universities in the United States and reaches students in every area of study. As people wonder about the value of a liberal arts education, and question whether colleges and universities are truly preparing students for the workforce, Writing for College and Beyond challenges those arguments by pointing out exactly how classroom policies and writing assignments apply beyond school walls. Professors, lecturers, and graduate students teaching Freshman Composition courses will find this book helpful. Also administrators who service the Freshman Composition population, such as Writing Center Directors will also find Writing for College and Beyond: Life Lessons from the College Composition Classroom a wonderful aid.