College Composition & Communication - Volume 68, Issue 2, 2016
Volume 68, Issue 2, 2016
- Articles
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What Writers Do: Behaviors, Behaviorism, and Writing Studies
More LessAuthor(s): Chris W. GallagherThis article offers a fuller account than we currently have of the complex, uneasy relationship between behaviorism and writing studies in order both to complicate our disciplinary historiography and to encourage writing scholars, teachers, and program administrators to articulate productive and unproductive understandings of writing behaviors.
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The Physical Mundane as Topos: Walking/Dwelling/Using as Rhetorical Invention
More LessAuthor(s): Jeffrey A. BachaBorrowing 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 inside and outside academia.
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Mobile Bodies: Triggering Bodily Uptake through Movement
More LessAuthor(s): Jennifer Lin LeMesurierThis 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 genres means teaching them to be aware of the intersection of bodily and intellectual resources.
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Doing Translingual Dispositions
More LessAuthor(s): Jerry Won Lee and Christopher JenksTranslingual dispositions, characterized by a general openness to plurality and difference in the ways people use language, are central for all users of English in a globalized society, and the fostering of such proclivities is an imperative to the contemporary composition classroom. In this article, we analyze student writing that emerged from a global classroom partnership between a US university and a Hong Kong university designed to facilitate the fostering of translingual dispositions. We show that an examination of writing provides a window into the varied ways in which students negotiate their linguistic identities and construct their ideological commitments to language difference. Although composition can become a space that facilitates opportunities for students to “do” translingual dispositions, these dispositions are constitutive of a constellation of highly complex sociocultural issues and experiences and therefore cannot be expected to be articulated in a preconceived and uniform manner.
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Veterans in the Writing Classroom: Three Programmatic Approaches to Facilitate the Transition from the Military to Higher Education
More LessAuthor(s): D. Alexis Hart and Roger ThompsonDrawing upon a two-year study of student-veterans in college writing classrooms, this article analyzes three types of courses developed in an effort to respond to increased military-affiliated student enrollments: veterans-only, veteran-focused, and veteran-friendly. The article concludes with recommendations for an asset-based approach to professional development for writing faculty
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Volumes & issues
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Volume 77 (2025 - 2026)
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Volume 76 (2024 - 2025)
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Volume 75 (2023 - 2024)
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Volume 74 (2022 - 2023)
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Volume 73 (2021 - 2022)
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Volume 72 (2020 - 2021)
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Volume 71 (2019 - 2020)
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Volume 70 (2018 - 2019)
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Volume 69 (2017 - 2018)
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Volume 68 (2016 - 2017)
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Volume 67 (2015 - 2016)
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Volume 66 (2014 - 2015)
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Volume 65 (2013 - 2014)
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Volume 64 (2012 - 2013)
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Volume 63 (2011 - 2012)
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Volume 62 (2010 - 2011)
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Volume 61 (2009 - 2010)
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Volume 60 (2008 - 2009)
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Volume 59 (2007 - 2008)
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Volume 58 (2006 - 2007)
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Volume 57 (2005 - 2006)
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Volume 56 (2004 - 2005)
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Volume 55 (2003 - 2004)
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Volume 54 (2002 - 2003)
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Volume 53 (2001 - 2002)
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Volume 52 (2000 - 2001)
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Volume 51 (1999 - 2000)
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Volume 50 (1998 - 1999)
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Volume 49 (1998)
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Volume 48 (1997)
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Volume 47 (1996)
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Volume 46 (1995)
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Volume 45 (1994)
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Volume 44 (1993)
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Volume 43 (1992)
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Volume 42 (1991)
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Volume 41 (1990)
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Volume 40 (1989)
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Volume 39 (1988)
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Volume 38 (1987)
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Volume 37 (1986)
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Volume 36 (1985)
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Volume 35 (1984)
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Volume 34 (1983)
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Volume 33 (1982)
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Volume 32 (1981)
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Volume 31 (1980)
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Volume 30 (1979)
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Volume 29 (1978)
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Volume 28 (1977)
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Volume 27 (1976)
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Volume 26 (1975)
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Volume 25 (1974)
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Volume 24 (1973)
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Volume 23 (1972)
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Volume 22 (1971)
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Volume 21 (1970)
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Volume 20 (1969)
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Volume 19 (1968)
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Volume 18 (1967)
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Volume 17 (1966)
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Volume 16 (1965)
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Volume 15 (1964)
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Volume 14 (1963)
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Volume 13 (1962)
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Volume 12 (1961)
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Volume 11 (1960)
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Volume 10 (1959)
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Volume 9 (1958)
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Volume 8 (1957)
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Volume 7 (1956)
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Volume 6 (1955)
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Volume 5 (1954)
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Volume 4 (1953)
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Volume 3 (1952)
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Volume 2 (1951)
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Volume 1 (1950)
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A Cognitive Process Theory of Writing
Author(s): Linda Flower and John R. Hayes
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Writing as a Mode of Learning
Author(s): Janet Emig
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Analyzing Revision
Author(s): Lester Faigley and Stephen Witte
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