Writing and Science
Edited by David Tietge
English Education: Composition Studies, The Next Generation: Teaching and Mentoring New Composition Teachers
Edited by Janet Alsup and Lisa Schade Eckert
Developing Authority in Student Writing through Written Peer Critique in the Disciplines
Barbara Schneider and Jo-Anne Andre
“Who, Me?”: Four Pedagogical Approaches to Exploring Student Identity through Composition, Literature, and Rhetoric
Michael Given, Jean A. Wagner, Leisa Belleau, and Martha Smith
Digital Recording Technology in
the Writing Classroom: Sampling as Citing
W. Keith Duffy,
Pennsylvania State University, Capital College
How Will We Write? A Report from
the National College Media Convention
Jeff Jeske,
Guilford College
Situated Writing Lessons:
Putting Writing Advice in Disciplinary Context
Martha Patton,
University of Missouri, Columbia
“We’re Just Kidding”: Sexual
Obscenities in Classroom Chat and Teaching about Audience
Christyne Berzsenyi,
Pennsylvania State University at Wilkes-Barre
Critical Discourse Analysis
and Academic Literacies:
My Encounters With Student Writing
Ron Christiansen,
Salt Lake Community College
“It just sort of evolved”: Negotiating
Group Identity
among Writers
Teresa Bruckner,
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Hypertexts
Learning To Love the Code: HTML
as a Tool in the Writing Classroom
Margaret Batschelet, University of Texas at San Antonio
Columns
GPSWriting and TacticalWriting
David Rieder, North Carolina State
Review
Review of Teaching Composition as a Social Process (McComiskey)
Stanley Harrison, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth
Teachers as Writers and Students as Writers: Writing, Publishing, and Monday-Morning Agendas
Joseph Eng, California State University, Monterey Bay
Introduction: Facing the Future of Electronic Publishing
David Blakesley, Doug Eyman, Byron Hawk, Mike Palmquist, Todd Taylor
|
The Writing Instructor: Issues/Challenges |
eBooks: A Battle for Standards
Paul Cesarini, Bowling Green State University
Writing and Publishing in the Boundaries: Academic Writing in/through the Virtual Age
Patricia Webb Peterson, Arizona State University
Modern Chivalry and the Case for Electronic Texts
Janice McIntire-Strasburg, St. Louis University
|
Academic.Writing: Pedagogy |
Think Different/Think Differently: A Tale of Green Squiggly Lines, or Evaluating Student Writing in Computer- Mediated Environments
Carl Whithaus, Old Dominion University
World Wide Words: A Rationale and Preliminary Report on a Publishing Project for an Advanced Writing Workshop
Peter Sands, Univ. of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
|
CCC Online: Tenure/Review |
Where Do I List This on My CV? Considering the Values of Self-Published Web Sites
Steven D. Krause
|
Enculturation: Hypertext/Theory |
Perspective: Notes Toward the Remediation of Style
Collin Brooke, Syracuse University
Responding in Kind: Down in the Body in the Undergraduate Poetry Course )Thoughts on Bakhtin, Hypertext, and Cheap Wigs(
Cynthia Nichols, North Dakota State University
Editing (Journals?) in the Late Age of Print
Byron Hawk, George Mason University
|
Kairos: History |
A brief history and technical overview of the current state of JAC Online, with a few observations about how the Internet is influencing (or failing to influence) scholarship: Or, who says you can’t find JAC Online?
George Pullman, Georgia State University
Kairos: Past, Present and Future(s)
Mick Doherty, American Airlines
Michael J. Salvo, Purdue University
Pedagogical Heresy, Uncommon Sense
Paul Heilker, Virginia Tech
Reflection and Self-Assessment: Resisting Ritualistic Discourse
Peggy O'Neill, Loyola College in Maryland
For the Classroom . . .
Rhetorical Pedagogy for Active and Passive Voice
Karen Wink, U.S. Coast Guard Academy
Issue Editor: Janet Alsup, Purdue University
Introduction
Writing Culture: Using Media Literacy and Popular Culture in the Middle and Secondary School
Janet Alsup, Purdue University
Carrie King Wastal, UC, San Diego
Featured Essay
Like Monkeys in a Tree: Writing, Media, Thinking
Roy F. Fox, University of Missouri-Columbia
Featured Interview
Power and Play in the Classroom: A Discussion about Media Literacy with Donna E. Alvermann
Janet Alsup, Purdue University
Essays
“What Would You Say to an Alien?” The American Culture Portfolio
Roy F. Fox, University of Missouri-Columbia
Integrating Media Literacy into the Study of World Literature
Renee Hobbs, Babson College
Mary Tyler Moore to Tori Amos: Teaching Pre-Service Teachers the Uses of Popular/Media Culture in Secondary Language Arts Curricula
Rich Lane, Clarion University
The Trouble with Harry: A Reason for Teaching Media Literacy to Young Adults
Diane Penrod, Rowan University
Reflections on a Shimmering Screen: Television’s Relationship to Writing Pedagogies
Bronwyn T. Williams, University of Louisville
Featured Hypertext
The Shaping Force of Electronic Texts and Journals on Our Professional Work
Victor J. Vitanza, Clemson University
Symposium
Revisiting A Short History of Writing Instruction
James J. Murphy, editor.
University of California, Davis
Contributors
Don Paul Abbott, University of California, Davis
Richard Leo Enos, Texas Christian University
Linda Ferreira-Buckley, University of Texas at Austin
S. Michael Halloran, Renselaer Polytechnic Institute
Catherine Hobbs, University of Oklahoma
Carol Dana Lanham, Univ. of California, Los Angeles
James J. Murphy, University of California, Davis
Marjorie Woods, University of Texas at Austin
Elizabethada Wright, Rivier College
TWI Columns
Absolut Writing
David Rieder, University of Texas at Arlington
Digresso
A Reading from The Book of Academics: Or, A Creation Story
Debrah Huffman, Erin Karper, and Julie Staggers
Hyperwriting: A New Process Model
Jean Mason, University of Toronto
Composition's Professionalism vs. the Writing Center Director: Rethinking the Director as a Teacher
Stephen A. Ferruci, Pennsylvania State University, Erie
Teaching at the Crossroads: Choices and Challenges in College Composition
Barbara Gleason, City University of New York
Memories of a Writing Teacher: Vague, Fragmented, and Maybe a Little Muddled
Janet Alsup, Purdue University
The Would-Be Mentor as Writing Instructor
Doug Downs, University of Utah
The Power of Ick; or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Start Teaching
David Gold, University of Texas at Austin
A More Critical Self
Rochelle Harris, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Seeing and Writing by Donald and Christine McQuade
Piotr Gwiazda, Fashion Institute of Technology
Developing Authority in Student Writing through Written Peer Critique in the Disciplines
Barbara Schneider and Jo-Anne Andre
“Who, Me?”: Four Pedagogical Approaches to Exploring Student Identity through Composition, Literature, and Rhetoric
Michael Given, Jean A. Wagner, Leisa Belleau, and Martha Smith