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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 106 to 120 of 1,406 results
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Trimbur, John – College Composition and Communication, 2009
This article examines how the South African Committee for Higher Education used the resources of print culture to design forms of writing and delivery systems that provided students and post-literate adults in the anti-apartheid struggle of the 1980s with the means to recognize and represent themselves as rhetorical agents, for whom reading and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Racial Segregation, Role of Education
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Jack, Jordynn – College Composition and Communication, 2009
This article examines nutritionist Lydia J. Roberts's use of the "democratic approach" as a rhetorical strategy both to build solidarity among scientists and to enact participatory research in a rural Puerto Rican community. This example suggests that participatory scientific methodologies are not necessarily democratic but may function…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Educational Strategies, Nutrition, Standards
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Mathieu, Paula; George, Diana – College Composition and Communication, 2009
This article argues that the teaching of public writing should not neglect issues of circulation and local need. In a series of case studies involving small press papers and homeless advocacy, the authors seek to extend recent work begun by Susan Wells, John Trimbur, and Nancy Welch, which raises crucial questions about public rhetoric in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction
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Helmbrecht, Brenda M.; Love, Meredith A. – College Composition and Communication, 2009
Our article seeks to integrate alternative voices into traditional rhetorical study by turning to "Bitch" and "BUST," two mainstream zines that serve as dynamic examples of young women's rhetoric in action. We believe these zines are shaping the present and future of women's rhetoric. Their most significant contribution to the understanding of…
Descriptors: Females, Young Adults, Feminism, Rhetoric
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Bizup, Joseph – College Composition and Communication, 2009
This article examines the various uses to which Stephen Toulmin has been put in composition studies. It presents data on citations of Toulmin in nine journals, considers appeals to Toulmin in several strains of composition scholarship, and argues that composition scholars ought to attend more carefully to Toulmin's later works. (Contains 4 tables…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction, Persuasive Discourse
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Kynard, Carmen; Eddy, Robert – College Composition and Communication, 2009
With the "counterhegemonic figured communities" of HBCUs as our lens, our idea(l)s are shaped within specific rewritings of race, access, and education that move us toward a new framework. Alongside teaching narratives, we foreground collaborative revisions of identity, critical mentoring, and coalition-work as an alternative theory of pedagogy…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Mentors, Race, College Students
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Newcomb, Matthew J. – College Composition and Communication, 2009
This article argues that the ideas of "play" and "abduction" in Charles Peirce's work represent an inventive theory of argument that opens up the kinds of activities that can be called "arguments" and avoids some of the struggles over imposed beliefs with which recent argument theory has grappled. (Contains 12 notes.)
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Rhetorical Theory, Play, Religious Factors
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Watson, Shevaun E. – College Composition and Communication, 2009
This essay offers an earlier chapter in the history of African American literacy by examining colonial literacy campaigns within the eighteenth-century Atlantic world. The discussion focuses on one such transatlantic effort spanning from London to Barbados, South Carolina, and West Africa, which used enslaved teachers as agents of literacy.…
Descriptors: African American History, Slavery, Group Membership, Language Teachers
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Brooks, Ronald Clark – College Composition and Communication, 2009
Because the ideological and methodological aims of post-process theory could distort the progressive agenda that has been connected to composition since the early twentieth century, we must look at this theory through the historical lens that Weaver and Hairston provide in order to maintain the progressive potential of post-process theory.…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Writing (Composition), Teaching Methods, Teacher Role
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Moore, Cindy; O'Neill, Peggy; Huot, Brian – College Composition and Communication, 2009
As writing-program administrators and faculty are being called upon more frequently to help design and facilitate large-scale assessments, it becomes increasingly important for us to see assessment as integral to our work as academics. This article provides a framework, based on current historical, theoretical, and rhetorical knowledge, to help…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Administrators, Models, Teaching Methods
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Carter, Shannon – College Composition and Communication, 2009
Scholarship on writing centers often relies on validation systems that reconcile tensions between equality and plurality by privileging one over the other. According to feminist political theorist Chantal Mouffe, neither absolute equality nor absolute plurality are possible in any democratic system, a conflict she calls "the democratic paradox"…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Writing (Composition), Laboratories, Goal Orientation
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Hunter, Susan M.; Giddens, Elizabeth J.; Walters, Margaret B. – College Composition and Communication, 2009
This article describes an interdisciplinary professional writing program and its benefits for students (in terms of knowledge, habits of mind, and developing careers). The authors present qualitative research findings about habits of mind and knowledge domains of successful students, which may prove valuable for faculty teaching in similar…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Writing (Composition), Interdisciplinary Approach, Professional Occupations
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Grobman, Laurie – College Composition and Communication, 2009
This article initiates scholarly discussions of "undergraduate research," an educational movement and comprehensive curricular innovation, in composition and rhetoric. I argue that by viewing undergraduate research production and authorship along a continuum of scholarly authority, student scholars obtain "authorship" and "authority" through…
Descriptors: Student Research, Undergraduate Students, Writing (Composition), Authors
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Odell, Lee; Katz, Susan M. – College Composition and Communication, 2009
Computer technology is expanding our profession's conception of composing, allowing visual information to play a substantial role in an increasing variety of composition assignments. This expansion, however, creates a major problem: How does one assess student work on these assignments? Current work in assessment provides only partial answers to…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Writing (Composition), Computer Uses in Education, Instructional Effectiveness
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Brooks, Kevin – College Composition and Communication, 2009
This article provides an analysis of Marshall McLuhan and Quentin Fiore's "The Medium Is the Massage," a visual-verbal text that is generally acknowledged as innovative but seldom taken seriously or read carefully. The analysis draws on the visual language vocabulary developed by Scott McCloud in "Understanding Comics" and argues that the field of…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Cartoons, Reader Text Relationship
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