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Hess, Aaron – Communication Teacher, 2013
This article describes an activity in which students will be able to apply rhetorical theory effectively and critically from specific theorists throughout history to modern-day issues. Through a simulated trial of a current figure, this activity makes connections between rhetorical theories to current affairs, thereby inviting students to consider…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Simulation, Rhetorical Theory, Current Events
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Corey, Elizabeth – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2013
This article is an investigation of two apparently contradictory impulses in Oakeshott's writings about liberal education. On the one hand, he implied that it was primarily "aesthetic", something undertaken for its own sake with no practical consequences. On the other hand, he often implied that a student might undergo a moral transformation in…
Descriptors: Essays, Moral Development, Aesthetics, Freedom
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Falter, Michelle M. – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2014
Adolescents often bring popular culture into school, but often these literacies are not embraced or taught in the English classroom. The author makes the case for using "Glee" in the classroom by demonstrating its persuasive power to disrupt heteronormative notions of gender and sexuality with teens. The author uses a feminist rhetorical…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Adolescents, Literacy Education, Television
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Sanchez, Raul – College English, 2012
Recent theoretical and technological developments, including concepts of networking elaborated by Bruno Latour, enable composition studies to take an empiricist turn toward issues of identity. More specifically, these developments help the field more strongly connect the figure of the writing-subject to the experiences of actual writers. In this…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Academic Discourse, College English, Higher Education
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Stroud, Scott R. – Western Journal of Communication, 2010
This article considers how rhetorical scholarship might proceed if it were to take the charge of pragmatic meliorism seriously. After discussing the notion of meliorism as employed by John Dewey, I argue that it would involve a radical reshaping of method in rhetorical theory, criticism, and pedagogy. Not all research must be meliorative, but…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Rhetorical Theory, Pragmatics, Scholarship
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Collin, Ross – Journal of Literacy Research, 2012
Focusing on matters of power and difference, this article examines rhetorical theories of genre and James Gee's theory of Discourse. Although both theories offer productive ways of understanding literate practice, it is argued, they are limited in crucial respects. Genre theory offers few ways of understanding how and why some social actors have…
Descriptors: Rhetorical Theory, Individual Power, Power Structure, Literary Genres
Lawler-Brunner, Jennifer Lynne – ProQuest LLC, 2012
This project interprets how John Henry Newman's (1801-1890) system of thought informs the philosophical and theoretical grounds for rhetorical praxis in the marketplace. His seminal lessons in "An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent" (1870) and "The Idea of a University" (1873 ed.) demonstrate the metaphoric power of words…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Rhetorical Theory, Catholics, Epistemology
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Stewart, Thomas J. – Composition Studies, 2011
This article examines Donald M. Murray's ideas about what he considered the essential solitude of all writing and what happens within that solitude. Murray, a pioneer of the process and modern expressivism movements in composition, identified a number of forces that he felt were at work within his mind whenever he wrote; this complicated aloneness…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods, Writing (Composition), Models
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Koro-Ljungberg, Mirka; Barko, Tim – Qualitative Inquiry, 2012
Although educational researchers predominately study complex, multidimensional problems, research findings and proposed arguments can sometimes be characterized as definite, simplified, and prone to particular types of answers or expected outcomes. The authors seek to problematize these definite and simplified notions of answers by looking at some…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Educational Research, Educational Researchers, Inquiry
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Zappen, James P. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2012
Traditional rhetoric attempts to find the available means of persuasion in public assemblies, law courts and ceremonials and is grounded in cultural values and beliefs. Traditional rhetoric supports the development of social communities and posits education as a primary means of maintaining these communities. In contrast, contemporary alternatives…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Values, Rhetoric, Rhetorical Theory
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Hill, Steven G.; Cable, Ted T.; Scott, David – Applied Environmental Education and Communication, 2010
Symbolic convergence theory posits that groups of like-minded people use linguistic symbols to construct a shared reality and form rhetorical visions (ways of viewing and communicating about an issue). To see how rhetorical visions might help shape public tourism policy, the authors used fantasy theme analysis to examine 206 Kansas newspaper…
Descriptors: Wildlife, Recreational Activities, Rhetoric, Tourism
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Reddick, Richard J.; Griffin, Kimberly A.; Cherwitz, Richard A. – Planning for Higher Education, 2011
President Obama and the first lady declared January 2010 as National Mentoring Month, highlighting the power of mentoring and its impact on youth. While the benefits of being someone's protege are well documented, the authors were especially excited to hear the president speak about the benefits of serving as a mentor. Discussions of mentoring…
Descriptors: Mentors, Entrepreneurship, Rhetorical Theory, Presidents
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Olson, Christa J. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2010
The rhetorical history of Ecuador is rife with examples of politicians, intellectuals, and artists promoting visions of national identity through images of Ecuador's indigenous population. Between the late nineteenth and mid-twentieth centuries, such depictions became common and displayed increasing emphasis on the physical characteristics of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Nationalism, Rhetoric, Indigenous Populations
Foss, Karen A.; Foss, Sonja K.; Paynton, Scott; Hahn, Laura – Journal of Case Studies in Education, 2014
This case study addresses the exigence of low retention and graduation rates of college students. The authors sought to incorporate the perspectives of all three stakeholders implicated in retention efforts--administrators, faculty, and students--by implementing a personalized system of instruction (PSI) in eight of their college courses. This…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Academic Persistence, School Holding Power, College Students
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Middleton, Joyce Irene – English Journal, 2011
A recent book that appeared a few years ago, "How Early America Sounded" by historian Richard Cullen Rath, connects well with much of the new, exciting, interdisciplinary and rhetorical research that the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) and the Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC) have supported, promoted, and…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Listening, Social Change, Rhetorical Theory
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