1,192 results on '"Writing practices"'
Search Results
202. The (im)possibilities of queer girlhoods: Chinese girls negotiating queerness and filial piety.
- Author
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Xie, Xumeng
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
203. Inventing expert in English language arts: A case study of critical literacies in a third grade classroom.
- Author
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Brownell, Cassie J
- Subjects
ENGLISH language ,INFORMATION literacy ,CASE studies ,COMMUNICATION ,INTELLECT ,TECHNOLOGY ,SCHOOL children ,WRITTEN communication - Abstract
Drawing from data generated during the 2016-2017 academic year, this study centred on U.S. children's design of two critical literacies compositions—a letter to Congress and a persuasive multimodal text. Situated within an integrated unit focused on (im)migrants, children asked legislators to act on the GOP Administration's proposed border wall and the #MuslimBan. Simultaneously, their teacher took steps to engage students in critical literacies conversations about access in/to the United States. Using a case study design, I investigated the following: How might traditional perceptions of 'expert' shift as children engage in critical literacies using varied materials and technologies? Specifically, I highlight how, by engaging an expansive skill set of communicative practices, children designed texts and enacted identities related to civic agency. Through multimodal composing, one nine-year-old white boy exemplified how children highlight knowledge beyond what is captured in a written text. His multimodal response illuminated his deep understanding of the obstacles faced by (im)migrants as they traverse boundaries. To alleviate such challenges, he "invented" both a transportable water filter cup and a fishing tool and engaged in critical making. When provided with opportunities to compose multimodally, the child—a white boy marked as "behind" in literacy—demonstrated rich content knowledge not readily visible in his written responses. His compositions disrupted understandings of expert with regard to elementary writing and critical literacies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
204. Special and General Education Teachers' Beliefs About Writing and Writing Instruction.
- Author
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Graham, Steve, Collins, Alyson A., and Ciullo, Stephen
- Subjects
SPECIAL education ,PROFESSIONS ,TEACHING methods ,PSYCHOLOGY of teachers ,THEORY of knowledge ,SURVEYS ,LEARNING strategies ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,ABILITY ,TRAINING ,DYSLEXIA ,FACTOR analysis ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,INTELLECT ,RESEARCH funding ,WRITTEN communication ,ELEMENTARY schools ,SCHOOL children ,INTELLECTUAL disabilities - Abstract
Seventy-six general education and 67 special education teachers working in the same 66 elementary schools were surveyed about their beliefs about writing. Each teacher taught writing to one or more fourth-grade students receiving special education services, including students with learning disabilities. Survey findings indicated that general education teachers believed that they were better prepared to teach writing than special education teachers, and they were more positive about their own efforts to learn to teach writing. General education teachers also held more positive attitudes about teaching writing and their own capabilities as a writer than their special education counterparts. Furthermore, general educators were more likely than special educators to indicate that writing developed through effort and process, and less likely to think that writing knowledge came from experts. Beliefs about adequacy of preparation to teach writing predicted teachers' beliefs about their level of knowledge to teach writing, efficacy to overcome students' writing difficulties, and attitudes toward teaching writing. Recommendations for future research and implications for practice are presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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205. Cognitive Plausibility and Qualitative Research.
- Author
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Martin, John Levi
- Subjects
QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
Small and Calarco have done the field a great service; we must go further and arm readers with better understandings of when authors have in fact fulfilled Small and Calarco's strictures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
206. Hiding in plain sight : Exploring the complex pathways between tactical concealment and relational wellbeing.
- Author
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Jones, David Raymond, Wall, Tony, Kenworthy, Amy, Hurd, Fiona, Dyer, Suzette, Hedges, Peggy, and Sankaran, Shankar
- Subjects
WELL-being ,HIGHER education - Abstract
We argue that the current environment in higher education is one of the primary drivers for the widespread adoption of concealment tactics with the aim of enhancing wellbeing. To explore the relationship between concealment and wellbeing, we draw upon Scott's conceptualization of "hidden transcripts" and Keyes's five dimensions of social wellbeing. Using a collaborative ethnographic approach, we examine a 2-year period of individual and collective inquiry by an eclectic multidisciplinary, international group of academics. Our empirical and theoretical contributions expose a complex and, at times, seemingly contradictory relationship between tactical concealments and relational wellbeing, with variously generative and destructive pathways between them. Our research offers a lens through which we can critically explore and extend our understanding of alternative pathways to wellbeing in organizational life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
207. Publishing in The Family Journal.
- Author
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Southern, Stephen
- Subjects
PERIODICAL publishing ,MARRIAGE ,PUBLISHED articles ,EDITORIAL boards ,ACQUISITION of manuscripts ,LITERATURE reviews ,MENTAL health counseling - Abstract
The Family Journal (TFJ) has experienced increases in manuscripts submitted for publication, especially from international scholars and quantitative researchers. This reverses a previous trend to publish more practice-oriented articles for our clinical readership. The journal will take efforts to balance theory, research, and practice. Some manuscripts are rejected for distribution to the editorial board (or "unsubmitted") due to problems conforming to the APA Publication Manual 7th Edition guidelines. Some submissions would benefit from reviews by colleagues and securing the services of an editor. Authors are asked to attend to guidelines concerning levels of headings and formatting of citations and references. Most importantly, authors should follow bias-free language guidelines. There are additional considerations in the desk review process such as including practice implications for Marriage and Family Counselors in the article and incorporating relevant previously published articles from TFJ in the literature review. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
208. Lecturer, Language Tutor, and Student Perspectives on the Ethics of the Proofreading of Student Writing.
- Author
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Harwood, Nigel
- Subjects
STUDENT attitudes ,STUDENT ethics ,SEMI-structured interviews ,TUTORS & tutoring ,LECTURERS ,PHYSICAL contact - Abstract
Various forms of proofreading of student writing take place in university contexts. Sometimes writers pay freelance proofreaders to edit their texts before submission for assessment; sometimes more informal arrangements take place, where friends, family, or coursemates proofread. Such arrangements raise ethical questions for universities formulating proofreading policies: in the interests of fairness, should proofreading be debarred entirely or should it be permitted in some form? Using questionnaires and semistructured interviews, this article investigates where three university stakeholder groups stand on the ethics of proofreading. Content lecturers, English language tutors, and students shared their views on the ethics of various lighter-touch and heavier-touch proofreader interventions. All three parties broadly approved of more minor interventions, such as correcting punctuation, amending word grammar, and improving sentence structure. However, students were found to be more relaxed than lecturers and language tutors about the ethics of more substantial interventions at the level of content. There were outliers within each of the three groups whose views on proofreading were wide apart, underscoring the difficulty of formulating proofreading policies that would attract consensus across the academy. The article concludes by discussing the formulation and dissemination of appropriate, research-led proofreading guidelines and issues for further exploration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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209. Tracing the Influences of Praxis on the Development of an Open Corequisite Writing Textbook.
- Author
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Atkinson, Dawn and Corbitt, Stacey
- Subjects
PRAXIS (Process) ,TEXTBOOKS ,HIGHER education & state ,ELECTRONIC textbooks ,TECHNICAL writing - Abstract
Although retrospective project reports are common in the materials development literature, accounts of textbook writing sessions are rare; so too are accounts of open textbook production. Open textbooks are learning resources that are free to use and oftentimes adapt by virtue of their copyright permissions. The authors used concurrent verbalization and interviews to document writing episodes while preparing their first book, an open textbook devised for corequisite technical writing courses. Corequisite designs pair content courses with explicit skill-building modules as a means to support underprepared learners in higher education in the United States. Qualitative content analysis of the data revealed how teaching and other praxis influenced the open textbook's composition: in the authors' applications of technical writing principles, pedagogical reasoning skills, and nonteaching work. The findings may encourage open textbook writers to exploit their established composing practices and knowledge bases to proceed with textbook production. In addition, the article highlights the usefulness of concurrent verbalization to textbook research and identifies the various materials development opportunities open textbook projects provide. It also contributes to the underresearched area of textbook production by exposing the complexities of open textbook development and how two novice authors negotiated them during writing episodes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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210. "The World Has to Stop Discriminating Against African American Language" (AAL): Exploring the Language Ideologies of AAL-Speaking Students in College Writing.
- Author
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Hankerson, Shenika
- Subjects
AMERICAN English language ,AFRICAN languages ,AFRICAN Americans ,COLLEGE curriculum ,COLLEGE students - Abstract
Drawing on recent decades, literature in college writing that theorizes the importance of Critical Language Awareness (CLA) curricula for African American Language (AAL)-speaking students, this article offers empirical evidence on the design and implementation of a college writing curriculum centered on CLA and its influence on AAL–speaking students' language ideologies with respect to both speech and writing. Qualitative analyses of students' pre- and-post-Questionnaires and the researcher's field notes demonstrate that the curriculum helped students view AAL as an independent, natural, and legitimate language and view themselves as critically conscious thinkers and writers—more likely and willing to develop their academic writing skills and the strategies that support employing their native language in writing—for example, code-meshing strategies. This study offers important implications for college writing instruction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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211. The Ethics of Writing for Publication.
- Author
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Wood, Marilynn J.
- Subjects
PLAGIARISM ,PUBLICATIONS ,JOURNALISTIC ethics ,WRITING - Abstract
The article discusses plagiarism as addressed in the document "Avoiding Plagiarism, Self-Plagiarism and Other Questionable Writing Practices: A Guide to Ethical Writing," by Miguel Roig of St. Johns University. Forms of self-plagiarism are examined, including duplicate publication, data fragmentation, and data augmentation. The problem of redundancy in publication is also discussed.
- Published
- 2009
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212. The constructed quality of Israeli TV on Netflix: The cases of Fauda and Shtisel.
- Author
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Lavie, Noa
- Subjects
VIDEOS ,LANGUAGE & languages ,TELEVISION series - Abstract
This study investigates how the concept of 'quality TV' is evolving in the age of streaming video on demand (SVOD) platforms, using reviews of two Israeli TV series on Netflix – Fauda and Shtisel. In accordance with Pierre Bourdieu's view of journalistic reviewers as social agents and intermediaries with the power to enshrine cultural artifacts in an artistic canon, the study is based on a qualitative analysis of reviews of these two series published on major Anglo-American journalistic platforms. The analysis shows how the reviewers take part in constructing the Netflix brand of 'a 'foreign-language quality TV' series. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
213. Teacher Reports of Secondary Writing Instruction with Deaf Students.
- Author
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Wolbers, Kimberly, Dostal, Hannah, and Holcomb, Leala
- Subjects
DEAF students ,WRITING education ,REPORT writing ,LISTENING comprehension ,PREPAREDNESS ,TEACHERS ,AMERICAN Sign Language - Abstract
Since students' writing skills are largely shaped by the quality of instruction they receive, we can learn from what teachers report about their beliefs and approaches to the teaching and learning of writing. This study explores the state of writing instruction at secondary levels with deaf and hard of hearing (DHH) students through a mixed-methods approach using a sequential explanatory design. Two hundred and twenty-two teachers responded to a survey about writing instruction, and 10 teachers participated in follow-up focus groups. The findings indicate that the primary difference between the hearing middle and high school student population and the DHH population is experiences of language deprivation, which impact the preparedness of teachers of DHH students, as well as the time and focus of their writing instruction. Teachers reported that American Sign Language/English bilingual instruction was the greatest area of need in research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
214. Temporality lost: A feminist invitation to vertical writing that shakes the ground.
- Author
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Helin, Jenny
- Subjects
ACADEMIC discourse ,FEMINISTS ,PLAYWRITING ,STRIKES & lockouts ,CLOCKS & watches - Abstract
Are we, as academics, stuck in a horizontal temporality, organised by the clock, that flattens our work, our words? In reading feminist work by Märta Tikkanen, Hélène Cixous, and others, a rupture strikes, establishing another temporality: vertical time. Is it possible, I ask, to learn from these authors and engage in academic writing in verticality? The answer is: Yes! Through an in-depth reading of special pieces, I see clearly that when we use our scholarly voice to write from within our vulnerabilities, it becomes possible to climb all the way up or dig ourselves deep down. In other words, we can 'go deep' in the sense of touching that which is most important, as well as finding ways to 'fly high,' through writing. This shows that writing and temporality are always already interweaved with each other because writing produces temporalities just as temporality at play produces writing. In this writing-temporality meshwork, there seems to be no set genre for vertical writing. Rather, it consists of a multitude of practices, written in the instant, from within the urgency of articulating that which matters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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215. The Platformization of Writing Instruction: Considering Educational Equity in New Learning Ecologies.
- Author
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Stornaiuolo, Amy, Higgs, Jennifer, Nichols, T. Philip, Leblanc, Robert Jean, and de Roock, Roberto Santiago
- Abstract
This chapter provides a systematic review of research published between 2006 and 2022 on the use of artificial intelligence (AI) platforms in writing instruction. We theorize writing and platforms as complex ecologies, investigating the interplay of their relations and implications for educational equity. Our findings suggested three functional categories of AI platforms in writing instruction (assistive, assessment, and authentication) and a focus on the technical dimensions of platforms and their intersections with the cognitive dimensions of writing. Finally, we found a focus on equity notably absent from our corpus. Taken together, these findings suggest an agenda for equity-oriented research and pedagogy that confronts aspects of platform and writing environments that have, to date, been omitted from the empirical record. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
216. Creative writing as feminist freedom.
- Author
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Dahl, Ulrika
- Subjects
EVALUATION ,PROMOTION (School) - Abstract
A personal narrative is presented which explores the authors experience of being in a process of assessment, evaluation, and presentation required for promotion.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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217. (Re)imagining an archive of haunting.
- Author
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Hach, Maria
- Abstract
This creative non-fiction piece explores my research and writing practice as it relates to my research on intergenerational haunting among women of the Cambodian diaspora. It describes my process towards capturing affective traces of the past, and my attempts to (re)imagine an archive of haunting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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218. Cyber Nuts and Bolts: Effective Participatory Online Learning, Theory and Practice.
- Author
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Barnard, Josie
- Subjects
ONLINE education ,VIRTUAL classrooms ,BOLTS & nuts ,COVID-19 pandemic ,CREATIVE writing ,THEORY-practice relationship ,NUTS - Abstract
This article presents emergent findings from an empirical research study conducted during Covid lockdown with 52 undergraduate students at a UK university November 2020–April 2021. The research study, which adopts a teacher-practitioner stance, builds on a 2012–2019 programme of research (represented by publications including Barnard 2019) which explores the potentials and dangers that digital technologies hold for pedagogy and education. It is located in the field of Creative Writing and uses the discipline's pedagogical practice of 'workshopping' as a case study. The Creative Writing workshop centres on the exchange of information and critically informed comment by participating students (generally in small groups), and, as such, has similarities with seminars in other disciplines. Hence it is hoped that this article will be of benefit both in the home discipline and more widely. The contention of this article is that, to maintain quality in the delivery of participatory online teaching, it is necessary to ensure an ongoing feedback loop between individuals' bodily existence 'IRL' ('In Real Life') and the section of cyberspace that they carve out and inhabit collaboratively during virtual seminar groups. It considers how the cliché of the 'digital native' can inhibit learning and the role of affect in enabling productive online and engagement. In taking initial steps towards development of a pedagogy of affect in which a 'neutral terrain' is established that enables students to apply and develop close reading skills in an online environment, it presents a new theoretical position on what constitutes effective pedagogy in the context of participatory virtual classrooms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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219. Touching Text: Feeling My Way Through Research-Creation.
- Author
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Romano, Nike
- Subjects
ART ,HIGHER education - Abstract
This article explores how artistic research practice, as a thinking through art, generates different understandings of the world. Having come to higher education through my visual arts practice, I trace threads of thinking-making practices that, while seeded in the studio, continue to generate new connections and concepts that in/form my PhD inquiry into different ways of learning in South African Higher Education contexts. Guided by Manning's conceptualization of research-creation as an ecology of practices operative within the interstices of making and thinking, I show how artmaking as an intuitive process nudges my thinking through-and-around concerns obliquely, attuned toward different registers and levels of intensities, cutting across normative accounts of what it means to know. Referring to two bodies of my work, sum of the parts (2010) and Evidence of Things Unseen (2014), the article shows how materiality and making conjugate new languages that give expression to the ineffable obscured in the name of Science and Fine Art. Exploring the diffractive entanglements of thinking-making practices in the "between" of writing and drawing, the article shows how writing-with, drawing-with, doodling-with, and scrawling-with activate and agitate the spaces between words and images and do inquiry differently. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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220. Triple Method Approach to Development of a Genre-Based Approach to Teaching ESL/EFL Writing: A Systematic Literature Review by Bibliometric, Content, and Scientometric Analyses.
- Author
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Zhai, Xiuwen and Razali, Abu Bakar
- Subjects
ENGLISH as a foreign language ,ENGLISH language writing ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,SCIENTOMETRICS ,CONTENT analysis - Abstract
In the last 19 years (2003–2021), research on genre-based approaches (GBAs) to writing pedagogy has been accumulating in the fields of English as a second language (ESL) and English as a foreign language (EFL). This review mapped existing literature to identify research trends and provide a research agenda for future GBAs. This study employed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines and identified 52 published articles and 2 unpublished doctoral theses via a structured keyword search on Web of Science, Scopus, ERIC, Google Scholar, and ProQuest in the fields of teaching English to speakers of other languages, language learning, and education. The results show that GBA is now widely used in teaching English academic writing to ESL/EFL tertiary/graduate students. The main research findings include: (1) the top five countries in the number of paper publications are China (i.e., five), the United States (i.e., five), Japan (e.g., 4), Thailand (e.g., four), and Sweden (e.g., four); (2) the top four authors in the number of paper publications are Hyland (i.e., two), Lu (i.e., two), Negretti (i.e., two), and Pineh (i.e., two); and (3) the top three most strengthen keywords are writing pedagogy, genre-based approach, and English for academic purpose. This study also discusses the theoretical and practical implications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
221. Veteran Teachers' Understanding of "Balanced Literacy".
- Author
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Fisher, Douglas, Frey, Nancy, and Lapp, Diane
- Subjects
LITERACY ,VETERANS ,HEALTH literacy ,TEACHERS ,PHONICS - Abstract
The term balanced literacy was popularized in the mid-1990s to describe a middle ground in terms of text selection, instruction, skills, and strategies. The intention was to merge the promising elements of whole language and phonics. Interactions with educators and literacy leaders across the country currently suggest that a term that had been seemingly well defined 20 years ago had become more vague. This descriptive study polled 25 veteran teachers to identify commonalities among their definitions and instructional applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
222. Writing Toward a Decolonial Option: A Bilingual Student's Multimodal Composing as a Site of Translingual Activism and Justice.
- Author
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Lee, Eunjeong
- Subjects
BILINGUAL students ,HISPANIC American students ,ACTIVISM ,DECOLONIZATION ,SEMI-structured interviews ,SHARING ,MODAL logic - Abstract
Drawing on discussions of (de)coloniality and translanguaging, this article reports findings from a classroom-based ethnographic study, focusing on how a self-identified Latina bilingual student resists colonial constructs of language and literacies in her multimodal project. Based on an analysis of the student's multimodal composition, other classroom writings, and a semistructured interview, I examine how she creatively and critically draws on her entire language and literacy repertoire in her multimodal composing. More specifically, I demonstrate how she draws from and builds on her lived experiences of linguistic injustices and racialization and transforms such experiences into embodied knowledge making and sharing through her multimodal composing. I argue that students' engagement with multimodality can and should be cultivated, sustained, and amplified as a site of translingual activism and justice with decolonial potential, and I suggest, further, that such a shift requires a change in approaching, reading, and valuing students' multimodal meaning making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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223. Modeling Mobile Writing: Applying Sociocognitive Models of Writing to Mobile Contexts.
- Author
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Schneier, Joel
- Subjects
WRITING processes ,SCHOLARSHIPS ,CONTENT analysis ,TEXT messages ,EMPIRICAL research - Abstract
Current cognitive and sociocognitive models of writing conceptualize writing processes as complex interactions between multidimensional mechanisms that activate a writer's social motivations, psychomotor processes, and cognitive resources in order to engage in writing. These models have been developed through years of empirical research employing a variety of data channels, such as keystroke logging; however, research about mobile writing processes have been understudied. This paper presents a study of mobile writing processes that used keystroke-logging methods in order to expand scholarship of writing processes into the realm of mobile writing. By examining how participants (N = 10) wrote on mobile devices at the keystroke level, as well as combining textual and keystroke analysis to examine context text-message (SMS) composition, this study argues for theoretically framing mobile writing as an embodied performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
224. Time, space, and text in the elementary school digital writing classroom
- Author
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Mills, Kathy, Exley, Beryl, Mills, Kathy, and Exley, Beryl
- Abstract
Theorists of multiliteracies, social semiotics, and the New Literacy Studies have drawn attention to the potential changing nature of writing and literacy in the context of networked communications. This article reports findings from a design-based research project in Year 4 classrooms (students aged 8.5-10 years) in a low socioeconomic status school. A new writing program taught students how to design multimodal and digital texts across a range of genres and text types, such as web pages, online comics, video documentaries, and blogs. The authors use Bernstein’s theory of the pedagogic device to theorize the pedagogic struggles and resolutions in remaking English through the specialization of time, space, and text. The changes created an ideological struggle as new writing practices were adapted from broader societal fields to meet the instructional and regulative discourses of a conventional writing curriculum.
- Published
- 2014
225. "I think it's something that we should lean in to": The use of OpenNotes in Canadian psychiatric care contexts by clinicians.
- Author
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Kassam, Iman, Shin, Hwayeon Danielle, Durocher, Keri, Lo, Brian, Shen, Nelson, Mehta, Rohan, Sockalingam, Sanjeev, Wiljer, David, Gratzer, David, Sequeira, Lydia, and Strudwick, Gillian
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
226. South Africa.
- Author
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Warren, Crystal
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,POETRY collections ,DRAMATISTS ,AUTOBIOGRAPHY - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
227. Onflow and consumption: Affect and first encounters.
- Author
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Lonergan, Paddy, Patterson, Maurice, and Lichrou, Maria
- Subjects
CUSTOMER experience ,CONSUMER culture theory ,AFFECT (Psychology) - Abstract
In this paper, we are concerned with how we might account for the under-appreciated relation of intensities that flow through and around consumption experiences. In pursuing clarity, researchers have tended to treat consumer experiences as bounded and discrete, segregated from the messy unfolding of life around them. In this work, we look to acknowledge this everyday unfolding of the experience to appreciate how we might articulate the more-than-representational excess of seemingly un-spectacular, quotidian moments of encounter, and how we might attune ourselves to the constant unfolding of consumer experiences. In addressing these concerns, we produce a series of narratives designed to reveal both the ecologies and processual registers of experience. These narratives seek not just to inform, but also to evoke and provoke. Moreover, they work to engage readers with the messiness of everyday life attempting to give form to phenomena that are essentially formless and in continuous circulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
228. Pedagogy of Possibility: Proleptic Teaching and Language Learning.
- Author
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Phillips Galloway, Emily and Meston, Heather M.
- Subjects
CLASSROOMS ,TEACHERS ,COMMUNITY college students ,COMMUNITIES ,SOCIAL participation ,SOUND recording executives & producers ,PARTICIPATION - Abstract
We charted how one educator's use of proleptic language—or language that invoked students' imagined future identities as if they are fully realized in the present—situated students in communities of academic and professional practice, both within the tangible community of the classroom and within those intangible communities consisting of college students, litigators, music producers, and activists which her students aspired to join. Students demonstrated transformative agency in aligning, resisting, and reinterpreting these proleptic bids, which appeared to create opportunities for students to engage in authentic uses of academic discourse as well as to develop critical rhetorical flexibility—or skill in using all language resources flexibly and critically as a part of participation in an array of social contexts. We suggest that the use of proleptic talk transforms the tenor of academic language instruction by centering students'—rather than teachers'—goals for language learning and by recognizing learners' past, present, and future selves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
229. Weaving Different Discourses to Understand the Field: Mystory as an Analytical Tool.
- Author
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Piercy, Gemma
- Subjects
COMMUNICATION patterns ,ACADEMIC discourse ,WEAVING ,DISCOURSE ,PARTICIPANT observation - Abstract
The bricolage of discourses that is part of the mystory approach offers a way to make sense of disparate resources relevant to the study of everyday life. These resources can include popular culture and social media materials, interviews and observations, and academic literature. Here, I explain what mystory is, as well as how and why I fused together personal (autoethnographic), popular and different kinds of academic discourses as bricolage. By layering difference discourses (popular, field-based, academic) with personal reflections (memory), I created coherent narratives that explicitly answered research questions. By weaving these different discourses into distinct patterns of thinking and writing, I found a way to balance my voice alongside the voices of my research participants and other artifacts of their world of cafés, roasteries, coffee, and the Internet to overcome writers' block. As such, this is also a story of how I found my voice through autoethnography. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
230. Black Parade: Conceptualizing Black Adolescent Girls' Multimodal Renderings as Parades.
- Author
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Griffin, Autumn A.
- Subjects
TEENAGE girls ,SEXISM ,PARADES ,AFRICAN Americans ,RACISM - Abstract
This piece builds on scholarship in African American parading and Black Girls' Literacies by presenting parading as a metaphor to analyze a website created by nine Black adolescent girls. I draw on multimodal analysis frameworks to understand the symbolic nature of the site and its components, as well as how the girls use it as a platform to speak to issues of racism, sexism, self-definition, joy, and celebration. The girls write against liminal perceptions of their identities, (re)positioning themselves and their lives as worthy of celebration and themselves as experts of Black girlhood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
231. Indigenous Girls Write, Right!? Unsettling Urban Literacies with Indigenous Writing Pedagogies.
- Author
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Cisneros, Nora Alba
- Subjects
TEENAGE girls ,CRITICAL race theory ,LITERACY ,PUBLIC spaces ,URBAN schools ,GIRLS - Abstract
This article begins with the fundamental premise that Indigenous adolescent girls are writers. Indigenous adolescent girls speak and write in multitudes of voices, yet their physical and literary presence is often unaccounted in educational research and writing. Guided by the theoretical insights of Chicana Feminist Epistemology and Tribal Critical Race Theory this paper illuminates how Indigenous Writing Pedagogies (IWP) emerged to acknowledge land and gendered relationships in urban schools. The author presents implications for Indigenous notions of literacies and relationships that can be elevated by educators working in and out of urban school spaces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
232. (Re)Membering: Black Women Engaging Memory through Journaling.
- Author
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Smith, Dywanna, Kelly-Morris, Katelyn, and Chapman, Shaniya
- Subjects
HISTORICALLY Black colleges & universities ,BLACK women ,JOURNAL writing ,STUDENT teachers - Abstract
This manuscript is a confluence of voices: A Black university professor at a Historically Black University in the Southeast and her two pre-service teachers. Using journaling as a catalyst for transformative healing; three young, Black women discuss their intersecting identities and bear witness to each other's memories. To resist racist representations Black women must confront the colonizing ideology by developing a critical consciousness. In short, we must confront massive hate by fully loving and embracing our Blackness. The study elucidates how selfactualization writing can cultivate healing while promoting academic success. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
233. "I Don't Think Kids Nowadays Feel Like They Have a Lot of Power": Exploring Teacher Civic Commitments in a National Online Letter Writing Project.
- Author
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Gargroetzi, Emma C. and Garcia, Antero
- Subjects
LETTER writing ,TEACHER development ,TEACHERS ,CIVICS education ,TEACHER education ,READING comprehension ,PARTICIPATION - Abstract
This study investigates teacher participation in a national online youth civic letter writing project through the lens of teacher civic commitments. Drawing on in-depth interviews and survey data from teachers who participated in the Letters to the Next President 2.0 project, civic commitments are articulated through civic beliefs, learning goals, instructional enactments, and geopolitical context. With a generic shared belief in "youth voice," teachers enacted the civic letter writing project through instructional activities that included (a) choice of topic, (b) publication, (c) reading letters from other youth, (d) research, (e) peer dialogue, and (f) connections beyond the Letters project. While beliefs appeared widely shared, divergence in learning goals and enactments led to distinct learning opportunities for students. With minimal research exploring the role of teachers in student civics learning, this study provides new insights to guide teacher preparation and ongoing teacher development in the realm of civics education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
234. Writing with the bitches.
- Author
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Huopalainen, Astrid
- Subjects
FEMINISM ,PETS ,ACADEMIC discourse ,POSTHUMANISM ,PHILOSOPHERS ,FEMINISTS - Abstract
Could the everyday affective relationships that we share with our animal companions inspire us to think, write and even care 'differently' in the field of organisation studies? In this paper, I suggest that organisational scholars have plenty to learn from post-qualitative writing and the posthumanist practice of feminist dog-writing. Drawing from literature on posthumanism, humanimal relations and post-qualitative methodology, I first frame feminist dog-writing as a practice that relies on post-qualitative writing and discuss what this framing potentially involves, in concrete terms. Second, I experiment with 'writing with the bitches' to illustrate how this kind of writing 'differently' – in ways in which the entangled co-becoming of the humanimal is highlighted in its multiplicity – could contribute to discussions of humanimal relations in the field of organisation studies and more disruptive, post-qualitative forms of writing in our scholarly field. Despite the many challenges of anthropocentric language and representation, I argue that feminist dog-writing has the capability to creatively confuse, disrupt, and transform more 'conventional', mechanical, and hu man -centred forms of academic writing. Finally, I suggest that feminist dog-writing invites human animals to engage differently with the sensate, more-than-human life-worlds that human-centred accounts of organisational life have typically sentimentalised, trivialised, or overlooked. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
235. Multiple binds and forbidden pleasures: Writing as poaching at French universities.
- Author
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Le Goix, Renaud, Houssay-Holzschuch, Myriam, and Noûs, Camille
- Subjects
POACHING ,ACADEMIC discourse ,PLEASURE ,HIGHER education - Abstract
Our contribution aims at providing a return on experience by describing and theorizing the tactics we developed to poach time, space, and resources in order to write. A series of neoliberal measures in French higher education during the last 20 years shape the context, and have consequences for the political and material economies of scholarly writing. We use de Certeau's concept of poaching, because the strategies that our institutions deploy exert immense pressure on our ordinary scholarly life. Consequently, writing economies have to resort to poaching tactics. We present some of the devices and fixes we have developed in this regard in terms of our teaching, supervision, and research activities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
236. Dead Reckoning: A Framework for Analyzing Positionality Statements in Ethnographic Research Reporting.
- Author
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Sybing, Roehl
- Subjects
ETHNOLOGY ,RESEARCHER positionality ,SCHOLARLY periodicals ,HUMAN research subjects ,PARTICIPANT observation ,QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
As essential as positionality is to qualitative research involving engagement with research participants, contemporary scholarly discussion of positionality is mainly aimed at educating emerging researchers about acknowledging their own subjectivities. In turn, there is little consensus regarding how authors should address positionality in writing for research publication. Emphasizing the importance of written positionality as a component of research transparency, this article proposes a framework for positionality in ethnographic research writing. The author collected 59 ethnographies published in peer-reviewed academic journals to study the extent to which researcher positionality is established or can be inferred through the writing of research. The analysis identifies a series of considerations for research writing such as the form of writing, sociocultural identities, relationships with research participants, and the resulting implications. The author proposes this framework as a guide for qualitative researchers who benefit from explicitly situating themselves in the research process through their writing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
237. Digital Documenting Practices: Collaborative Writing in Workplace Training.
- Author
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Nissi, Riikka and Lehtinen, Esa
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC records ,CONVERSATION analysis ,SOCIAL interaction ,DIGITAL technology - Abstract
The present article examines collaborative writing in organizational consulting and training, where writing takes place as part of a group discussion assignment and is carried out by using digital writing technologies. In the training, the groups use digital tablets as their writing device in order to document their answers in the shared digital platform. Using multimodal conversation analysis as a method, the article illustrates the way writing is interactionally accomplished in this setting where digital writing intertwines with face-to-face interaction as the groups jointly formulate a documentable written entry for specific institutional purposes. The results show how writing is managed in situated ways and organized by three specific aspects: access, publicity, and broader organizational practice. The article advances prior understanding of the embodied nature of writing and writing with technologies by demonstrating how the body and the material and social nature of writing technologies intertwine within situated social interaction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
238. Novel, original, and business as usual: Contributing in the humanities.
- Author
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Hellström, Tomas
- Subjects
SERENDIPITY ,POLICY sciences ,RESEARCH funding ,SCHOLARS - Abstract
This paper focuses on how contributions are argued in research proposals in the humanities. Due to standardizing tendencies in research funding towards formats characteristic of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) subjects, there has been concern that the humanities are marginalized. In this study, 'contribution statements' were identified in proposals funded by the Bank of Sweden Tercentenary Foundation across the humanistic disciplines. These statements were systematically analyzed in terms of type and structure of contributions advanced. The results suggest that the humanities differ from the sciences in terms of specificity of focus, a high level of 'acceptable serendipity' in proposed outcomes, but that these disciplines structurally tend to adhere to the same types of research contribution arguments as STEM. A better understanding of the way in which humanities scholars frame contributions offers insight into how these fields change and how they relate to developments in the science policy and funding landscape. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
239. To Reverse Item Orientation or Not to Reverse Item Orientation, That Is the Question.
- Author
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Dueber, David M., Toland, Michael D., Lingat, John Eric, Love, Abigail M. A., Qiu, Chen, Wu, Rongxiu, and Brown, Alan V.
- Subjects
FACTOR analysis ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress - Abstract
To investigate the effect of using negatively oriented items, we wrote semantic reversals of the items in the Rosenberg Self Esteem Scale, UCLA Loneliness Scale, and the General Belongingness Scale and used them to create four experimental conditions. Participants (N = 2,019) were recruited through Amazon's Mechanical Turk. Data were assessed for dimensionality, item functioning, instrument properties, and associations with other variables. Regarding dimensionality, although a two-factor model (positively vs. negatively oriented factors) exhibits better fit than a unidimensional model across all conditions, bifactor indices were used to argue that a unidimensional interpretation of the data can be employed. With respect to item functioning, factor loadings were found to be nearly invariant across conditions, but thresholds were not. Concerning instrument properties, inclusion of negatively oriented items results in lower mean scores and higher score variances. Instruments with both positively and negatively oriented items demonstrated lower reliability estimates than those with only one orientation. For associations with other variables, path coefficients in a model where loneliness mediates the effects of belongingness on life satisfaction and self-esteem were found to vary across conditions. Findings suggest that negatively oriented items have minor impact on instrument quality, but influence measurement model and path coefficients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
240. Teaching Students in the Technical and Professional Communication Classroom Practices for Innovation Rhetoric.
- Author
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Moreau, Craig
- Subjects
COMMUNICATION of technical information ,CLASSROOMS ,RHETORIC ,INSTRUCTIONAL innovations - Abstract
Initiating and continuing rhetorical invention is an important practice for teams seeking to innovate. Workplace professionals demonstrate one potential model of rhetorical innovation by instantiating four rhetorical moves that make up a broader practice of difference-driven inquiry (DDI). But it remains unknown how DDI, as a model of innovative rhetoric, can be taught in the technical and professional communication classroom. Over the course of two studies, the author investigated a pedagogy attempting to teach practices for innovation rhetoric. The results show that the pedagogy can be effective but that more scaffolding is needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
241. Emotion, Rhetoric, and Entrepreneurial Experience: A Survey of Start-Up Community Membership.
- Author
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Gogan, Brian and Belinsky, Stacy J.
- Subjects
RHETORICAL theory ,EMOTIONS ,BUSINESSPEOPLE ,REPRESENTATION theory ,RHETORIC - Abstract
This article connects work on emotion, rhetoric, and entrepreneurial experience as it reports findings from a questionnaire issued to 80 entrepreneurs who belong to the global entrepreneur community Startup Grind. The findings from this study offer researchers a more robust representation of the rhetorical theories that guide entrepreneurs' professional communication practices. In particular, the authors report on the distribution and dependency between two variables: operative rhetorical theory (indicated by one of four choices) and entrepreneurial experience (indicated by number of ventures and total years of experience). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
242. Argumentative Writing as an Epistemic Practice in Middle School Science.
- Author
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Newell, George E. and Misar, Katherine S.
- Subjects
MIDDLE schools ,MIDDLE school students ,TEACHING methods ,REPORT writing ,PARTICIPATION - Abstract
This study explores one teacher's instructional method for teaching life sciences using argumentation and argumentative writing rather than simple templates for writing claims and evidence. The microethnographic discourse analytic case study reported here included the teacher and 26 "advanced" eighth-grade students in a suburban middle school. Nine consecutive video-recorded lessons and related data were analyzed, focusing on how the teacher and students constructed the theory of evolution during instructional conversations about evidence and reasoning and about the content of students' written arguments on the theory. The teacher created a context in which students developed arguments with teacher support to ensure that they were learning to use argumentation as a heuristic to understand concepts and to engage in argumentative practice central to doing science. The modes of participation of two case study students are contrasted to explore two different trajectories and to examine particular cases of writing a lab report. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
243. "If a (queer) revolt is to come": Toward a sensuous pedagogy for dis/orienting management learning.
- Author
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Perezts, Mar
- Subjects
ORGANIZATIONAL learning ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,MANAGEMENT education ,QUEER theory - Abstract
I define "organized numbness" as the organized inability to perceive sensations, a learned desensitization operating in the way our (1) bodies, (2) language, and (3) knowledge are organized. I propose poetic synesthesia's power to associate several sensory perceptions as a way to unlearn this sort of disembodied habituation. Inspired by the so-called "accursed" French poets of the 19th century, the "long, prodigious, and rational disorganization of all the senses" of synesthesia helps me propose a method for unlearning organized numbness. I illustrate this by "a study in scarlet," that is, by plunging into the depths of a synesthetic exploration of blood as my "fil rouge" to infuse our working bodies with renewed sensorial and embodied -- or rather "embloodied" -- life. I end by discussing how cultivating poetic synesthesia can help us unlearn organized numbness in the body, in language, and in knowledge, and how it can instead respectively foster resonance by learning (1) a different embodied habituation of sensorial sensitivity, (2) a language that instead of abstracting us from the senses actually allows us to reconnect with them and to delve deeply into their combined and thereby potentiated power, and (3) an epistemological gateway to the "unknown." [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
244. A less evaluative measure of Big Five personality: Comparison of structure and criterion validity.
- Author
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Wood, Joshua K, Anglim, Jeromy, and Horwood, Sharon
- Subjects
PERSONALITY assessment ,ALCOHOL drinking ,PERSONALITY tests ,PERSONALITY ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,STATISTICAL reliability ,FIVE-factor model of personality - Abstract
Researchers and practitioners have long been concerned about detrimental effects of socially desirable responding on the structure and criterion validity of personality assessments. The current research examined the effect of reducing evaluative item content of a Big Five personality assessment on test structure and criterion validity. We developed a new public domain measure of the Big Five called the Less Evaluative Five Factor Inventory (LEFFI), adapted from the standard 50-item IPIP NEO, and intended to be less evaluative. Participants (n = 3164) then completed standard (IPIP) and neutralized (LEFFI) measures of personality. Criteria were also collected, including academic grades, age, sex, smoking, alcohol consumption, exercise, protesting, religious worship, music preferences, dental hygiene, blood donation, other-rated communication styles, other-rated HEXACO personality, and cognitive ability (ICAR). Evaluativeness of items was reduced in the neutralized measure. Cronbach's alpha and test-retest reliability were maintained. Correlations between the Big Five were reduced in the neutralized measure and criterion validity was similar or slightly reduced in the neutralized measure. The large sample size and use of objective criteria extend past research. The study also contributes to debates about whether the general factor of personality and agreement with socially desirable content reflect substance or bias. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
245. Decolonizing Organizational Communication.
- Author
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Pal, Mahuya, Kim, Heewon, Harris, Kate L., Long, Ziyu, Linabary, Jasmine, Wilhoit Larson, Elizabeth, Jensen, Peter R., Gist-Mackey, Angela N., McDonald, Jamie, Nieto-Fernandez, Beatriz, Jiang, Jing, Misra, Smita, and Dempsey, Sarah E.
- Subjects
ORGANIZATIONAL communication ,DECOLONIZATION ,SOCIAL justice ,COLONIES - Abstract
The ideas of this forum germinated at the Organizational Communication Division's pre-conference at the 106th annual convention of the National Communication Association (NCA) in 2020. A group of scholar-teachers, committed to addressing various critical social issues, came together to challenge dominant ideas, paradigms, and structures within and beyond organizational communication. We engaged with decolonization and social justice as an ongoing project that cultivates scholarship, pedagogy, and public engagement. Our discussions left us with a sense of urgency and inspiration to work substantively toward thinking differently about organizational communication. Our goal in this forum is to present the collective as a sharp provocation to decenter the spaces of theorizing and pedagogical practices in organizational communication and beyond. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
246. No Longer a Prison: The Logistics and Politics of Transforming a Prison as Work of Architecture.
- Author
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Karami, Sepideh
- Subjects
RECREATION centers ,PRISONS ,ARCHITECTURAL design ,POLITICAL prisoners ,WORK design - Abstract
This article discusses the political role of architectural work and design in transforming a prison into a museum and recreational center. The text focuses on Qasr Prison, the first civil prison in Iran, designed by the Russian-Iranian architect Nikolai Markov in 1927 in Tehran. Built in 1790, the prison's site was originally a royal palace; it is from this that its name, Qasr—meaning palace—was taken. Later, in 1953, a new building was added out of necessity, due to the increasing number of political prisoners. It was only in 2003 that the prison was shut down. In 2008, a decision was made to transform it into a museum and a recreational center, and it became Qasr Museum-Garden. The text expands the role of architecture beyond the design of the building and into designing carceral logistics as well as constructing performing grounds for state propaganda. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
247. Reading the Paintings—Watching the Poems: Toward the Post-Media Inquiry With Networked City Textualities.
- Author
-
Golovátina-Mora, Polina
- Subjects
GRAFFITI artists ,METHODOLOGY ,ART ,TEXTURE (Art) ,PUBLIC spaces - Abstract
The article explores rhizomatic poetic practices of Medellín-based graffiti artist Señor Ok. His work is the city revealed as a relational, multidimensional texture. It transforms striated urban space to smooth by bringing other meanings from the periphery to the surface and decentralizing the dominant image of the city. I look at his work as poetry as an entanglement of his relationship and his daily life in the city, in the country, in the broader world. I argue that as an assemblage that forms assemblages within the urban textures, his art becomes methodology for critical non-representational affective inquiry of urban spaces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
248. Fiction in Goffman.
- Author
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Smith, Greg
- Subjects
SELF-presentation ,ACADEMIC dissertations ,FICTION ,COMMUNITIES ,EVERYDAY life ,BEACHES - Abstract
There are no references to creative fiction in Erving Goffman's founding statement of his sociology of the interaction order, his 1953 Chicago doctoral dissertation (Communication Conduct in an Island Community). Yet four pages into his first and best-known book, The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life (1959), Goffman cites a 'novelistic incident' describing the posturing of Preedy, a 'vacationing Englishman' on a Spanish beach. It is introduced in order to articulate the distinction between 'expressions given' and 'expressions given off' and to indicate their capacity for intentional or unintentional engineering. The page-long passage about Preedy, found in a 1956 collection of William Sansom's short stories, is often mentioned in reviews and summaries of Goffman's groundbreaking book. This article describes the types of fiction drawn upon by Goffman and examines the 'work' that fictional illustrations distinctively do in his writings. The discussion sheds light not only on why Goffman elected to include fictional illustrative materials in his sociology and why eventually he dropped their use, it also underscores some strengths and limits of the fictional for interactional analysis in sociology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
249. Assessing the Efficacy and Social Validity of CriaTivo , a Curriculum-Based Intervention to Promote Self-Regulation of Writing in Portuguese Elementary Education.
- Author
-
Margarida Veiga-Simão, Ana, Oliveira, Sofia, Silva-Moreira, Janete, and Itália Temudo, Maria
- Subjects
SOCIAL values ,SELF regulation ,ELEMENTARY education ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,PORTUGUESE students - Abstract
Writing has a leading role in learning and, although elementary-school curricula emphasize the development of this complex skill, many students still struggle with their writing performance. This study aimed to assess the efficacy and social validity of CriaTivo, a curriculum-based intervention developed following a Response to Intervention model to promote self-regulation of the writing process (i.e., planning, monitoring, revising) applied to the written composition of narrative texts across third and fourth grades. Two hundred eighty-one Portuguese students (55% boys, M = 8.58 years, SD = 0.79) and their teachers participated in the study. A mixed-methods research design was used, and data was collected at two points in time. Regarding the intervention's efficacy, results were promising, depicting improvements at posttest in students' planning and monitoring skills, as also in their writing quality. The findings also supported the intervention's social validity for both students and teachers. Despite requiring further research, CriaTivo appears to be a promising curriculum-based intervention which responds to the previously identified research and practice needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
250. A Review on Antecedents and Consequences of Leisure Reading and Writing in Children.
- Author
-
Birnbaum, Lisa and Kröner, Stephan
- Subjects
READING ,ELEMENTARY schools ,ELEMENTARY education ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,COMMITMENT (Psychology) - Abstract
It is desirable that children engage in reading and writing beyond school. What is known about various individual and environmental variables that may be related to children's leisure reading and writing? And how strong is existing evidence? Our scoping review aims at mapping research on leisure reading and writing in first- to fourth-graders. Using content analysis, we extracted 135 research findings, among them only 6 on leisure writing. In most findings, leisure reading and writing were considered as consequences of variables like reading competence, motivation, and attitudes. Considerably fewer findings included leisure reading and writing as antecedents. We discuss the need for more longitudinal and experimental studies and a stronger focus on the connection between leisure reading and writing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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