Making Progress: Programmatic and Administrative Approaches for Multimodal Curricular Transformation
Autor Logan Beardenen Limba Engleză Paperback – 31 mar 2022 – vârsta ani
MCT can be achieved at the intersection of program documents and practices. Bearden details ten composition programs that have undergone MCT, offering interview data from the directors who oversaw and/or participated within the processes. He analyzes a corpus of outcomes statements to discover ways we can “make space” for multimodality and gives instructors and programs a broader understanding of the programmatic values for which they should strive if they wish to make space for multimodal composition in curricula. Making Progress also presents how other program documents like syllabi and program websites can bring those outcomes to life and make multimodal composing a meaningful part of first-year composition curricula.
First-year composition programs that do not help their students learn to compose multimodal texts are limiting their rhetorical possibilities. The strategies in Making Progress will assist writing program directors and faculty who are interested in using multimodality to align programs with current trends in disciplinary scholarship and deal with resistance to curricular revision to ultimately help students become more effective communicators in a digital-global age.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781646422128
ISBN-10: 1646422120
Pagini: 136
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.2 kg
Editura: Utah State University Press
Colecția Utah State University Press
ISBN-10: 1646422120
Pagini: 136
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.2 kg
Editura: Utah State University Press
Colecția Utah State University Press
Recenzii
“A needed and important intervention in rhet/comp. WPAs need this data and these models, and teachers can learn a lot from thinking about doing multimodal work on a programmatic scale.”
—Crystal VanKooten, Oakland University
“As twenty-first-century writing instructors, we cannot continue to see multimodal composition as an ‘add-on’ or an afterthought. Making Progress does an excellent job of gently pushing readers to accept this fact, offering evidence for what having multimodal outcomes can look like, and giving suggestions for implementing a ‘multimodal curricular transformation.’”
—Jan Rieman, University of North Carolina Charlotte
—Crystal VanKooten, Oakland University
“As twenty-first-century writing instructors, we cannot continue to see multimodal composition as an ‘add-on’ or an afterthought. Making Progress does an excellent job of gently pushing readers to accept this fact, offering evidence for what having multimodal outcomes can look like, and giving suggestions for implementing a ‘multimodal curricular transformation.’”
—Jan Rieman, University of North Carolina Charlotte
Notă biografică
Logan Bearden directs the First-Year Writing Program and Digital Studio at Eastern Michigan University. He has published on outcomes statements, multimodal composition, and writing program administration in various venues and coedited Radiant Figures: Visual Rhetorics in Everyday Administrative Contexts.