- NCTE Publications Home
- All Journals
- College Composition & Communication
- Previous Issues
- Volume 70, Issue 3, 2019
College Composition & Communication - Volume 70, Issue 3, 2019
Volume 70, Issue 3, 2019
- Articles
-
-
-
Writing to Assemble Publics: Making Writing Activate, Making Writing Matter
Author(s): Laurie E. GriesIn this article, I weave new materialist theories about assemblage, community, agency, and rhetorical responsibility to argue for pedagogies that foreground writing to assemble publics and offer direct rhetorical training in campaign organizing. In describing three student activist campaigns, I demonstrate how this pedagogy challenges students to create socio-material assemblages that entice bodies into collective action—a challenge that demands tactile agility, creative activism, and often metanoic revision.
-
-
-
Using Objective-Motivated Knowledge Activation to Support Writing Transfer in FYC
Author(s): Jerry StinnettThis article theorizes how students know when to activate knowledge acquired in FYC courses. Addressing knowledge activation as motivated by pursuing activity-specific objectives, the author calls for situating students’ encounter with and acquisition of rhetorical knowledge and practices of writing as knowledge of how to perform activities other than writing.
-
-
-
Relive Differences through a Material Flashback
Author(s): Zhaozhe WangThrough an ecological and autoethnographic analysis of a repository of diachronically archived texts written over a period of six years in multiple cultural, geographical, and disciplinary contexts, the author unfolds his materialized experiences of coming to terms with, embracing, and composing with rhetorical differences as spatiotemporal relationality and affordances.
-
-
-
Documenting and Discovering Learning: Reimagining the Work of the Literacy Narrative
Author(s): Julie Lindquist and Bump HalbritterWe suggest that literacy narratives can be an important part of a curriculum designed to encourage students to understand themselves as developing learners and students. We know that there is great potential for literacy narratives—for narrativizing—when invited within a scaffolded curriculum of collaborative narrative inquiry. We place literacy narratives in the service of documenting learning—that is, within a pedagogical scaffolding designed to lead students through a series of moves that feature inquiry and discovery (about literacy). As such, the literacy narrative that emerges as most important is the final reflective narrative: the one we have spent all semester preparing students to write. That act of deferral creates an opportunity to put the literacy narrative (LN) assignment to different earlier use as a means for creating an ongoing, experiential literacy-learning narrative that will be realized as a reflective narrative: one we call the experiential-learning documentary (ELD).
-
-
-
Researching Writing Program Administration Expertise in Action: A Case Study of Collaborative Problem Solving as Transdisciplinary Practice
Author(s): Tricia Serviss and Julia VossTheorizing 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 rhetoric-composition/writing studies’ disciplinary expertise in twenty-first-century higher education.
-
Volumes & issues
-
Volume 76 (2024 - 2025)
-
Volume 75 (2023 - 2024)
-
Volume 74 (2022 - 2023)
-
Volume 73 (2021 - 2022)
-
Volume 72 (2020 - 2021)
-
Volume 71 (2019 - 2020)
-
Volume 70 (2018 - 2019)
-
Volume 69 (2017 - 2018)
-
Volume 68 (2016 - 2017)
-
Volume 67 (2015 - 2016)
-
Volume 66 (2014 - 2015)
-
Volume 65 (2013 - 2014)
-
Volume 64 (2012 - 2013)
-
Volume 63 (2011 - 2012)
-
Volume 62 (2010 - 2011)
-
Volume 61 (2009 - 2010)
-
Volume 60 (2008 - 2009)
-
Volume 59 (2007 - 2008)
-
Volume 58 (2006 - 2007)
-
Volume 57 (2005 - 2006)
-
Volume 56 (2004 - 2005)
-
Volume 55 (2003 - 2004)
-
Volume 54 (2002 - 2003)
-
Volume 53 (2001 - 2002)
-
Volume 52 (2000 - 2001)
-
Volume 51 (1999 - 2000)
-
Volume 50 (1998 - 1999)
-
Volume 49 (1998)
-
Volume 48 (1997)
-
Volume 47 (1996)
-
Volume 46 (1995)
-
Volume 45 (1994)
-
Volume 44 (1993)
-
Volume 43 (1992)
-
Volume 42 (1991)
-
Volume 41 (1990)
-
Volume 40 (1989)
-
Volume 39 (1988)
-
Volume 38 (1987)
-
Volume 37 (1986)
-
Volume 36 (1985)
-
Volume 35 (1984)
-
Volume 34 (1983)
-
Volume 33 (1982)
-
Volume 32 (1981)
-
Volume 31 (1980)
-
Volume 30 (1979)
-
Volume 29 (1978)
-
Volume 28 (1977)
-
Volume 27 (1976)
-
Volume 26 (1975)
-
Volume 25 (1974)
-
Volume 24 (1973)
-
Volume 23 (1972)
-
Volume 22 (1971)
-
Volume 21 (1970)
-
Volume 20 (1969)
-
Volume 19 (1968)
-
Volume 18 (1967)
-
Volume 17 (1966)
-
Volume 16 (1965)
-
Volume 15 (1964)
-
Volume 14 (1963)
-
Volume 13 (1962)
-
Volume 12 (1961)
-
Volume 11 (1960)
-
Volume 10 (1959)
-
Volume 9 (1958)
-
Volume 8 (1957)
-
Volume 7 (1956)
-
Volume 6 (1955)
-
Volume 5 (1954)
-
Volume 4 (1953)
-
Volume 3 (1952)
-
Volume 2 (1951)
-
Volume 1 (1950)
Most Read This Month
