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- Volume 71, Issue 3, 2020
College Composition & Communication - Volume 71, Issue 3, 2020
Volume 71, Issue 3, 2020
- Articles
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Using Design Thinking to Teach Creative Problem Solving in Writing Courses
Author(s): Scott WibleIntegrating design thinking methodology into writing courses can help students to develop creative approaches to problem definition and solution development. Tracing how students work with and through written genres common to design thinking reveals the possibilities and potential of learning new patterns of inquiry and argumentation. Developing these creative habits of mind empowers students to explore and invent solutions to complex, multidimensional problems across the broad range of their disciplinary, professional, and civic lives.
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“Like Coming Home”: African Americans Tinkering and Playing toward a Computer Code Bootcamp
Author(s): Antonio ByrdSome computer code bootcamps offer racially marginalized adults training in computer programming to assist in their social mobility. Many African American adults have little to no prior experience with programming. Literacy life history interviews show that the procedural literacy adult students practiced out of school scaffolded their learning coding literacy.
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Self-Care as Professionalization: A Case for Ethical Doctoral Education in Composition Studies
Author(s): Dana Lynn Driscoll, S. Rebecca Leigh and Nadia Francine ZaminThrough surveys and interviews of 433 doctoral faculty and students, we explore professional self-care practices and related issues of academic guilt, imposter syndrome, and burnout. We argue that self-care should be included as a professional practice, taught and modeled, to prepare doctoral students for careers as functional and healthy faculty.
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Re-Engaging Rhetorical Education through Procedural Feminism: Designing First-Year Writing Curricula That Listen
Author(s): Cassandra WoodyThis article argues that rhetoric-focused first-year composition curricula may effectively use feminist revisions to rhetoric by employing a method the author calls procedural feminism, or the distillation of feminist rhetorical practices and theory within curricular development that does not make feminism a topic students will directly engage. The author argues that employing procedural feminism can move students to become more ethical participants in public discourse while circumventing student resistance to ideological classrooms.
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