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Across the Disciplines

A refereed journal devoted to language, learning, and academic writing, Across the Disciplines publishes articles relevant to writing and writing pedagogy in all their intellectual, political, social, and technological complexity. 

Tags: rhetoric and composition, CAC, composition studies, postsecondary education, writing studies, technology, Pedagogy, writing in the disciplines, WAC
Border Talk
Tags: writing center, ethnography, faculty, Student Writing, postsecondary education, secondary education
Critical Transitions: Writing and the Question of Transfer

Edited by Chris M. Anson and Jessie L. Moore

In Critical Transitions: Writing and the Question of Transfer, Chris Anson and Jessie Moore offer an important new collection about prior learning and transfer theories that asks what writing knowledge should transfer, how we might recognize that transfer, and what the significance is—from a global perspective—of understanding knowledge transformation related to writing. The contributors examine strategies for supporting writers' transfer at key critical transitions.

Tags: secondary education, postsecondary education, first-year composition, identity, WAC, composition studies, transfer
Double Helix
Tags: faculty development, online writing instruction, scientific writing, postsecondary education, writing studies, WAC, writing in the disciplines, Teaching strategies, Pedagogy
Graduate Writing Across the Disciplines
Tags: Pedagogy, technical and professional communication, student writing, writing program, writing center, postsecondary institution, postsecondary education, WAC
High School Writing Center
Tags: reform, writing center, secondary institution, postsecondary education, writing program, writing program administration
Placing the History of College Writing

By Nathan Shepley

In Placing the History of College Writing, Nathan Shepley argues that pre-1950s composition history, if analyzed with the right conceptual tools, can pluralize and clarify our understanding of the relationship between the writing of college students and the writing's physical, social, and discursive surroundings. Even if the immediate outcome of student writing is to generate academic credit, Shepley shows, the writing does more complex rhetorical work. 

Tags: postsecondary institution, postsecondary education, archive, first-year composition, composition studies, history of writing
Volume 1
Tags: WEC, scientific writing, Teaching strategies, common core, writing in the disciplines, composition studies, postsecondary education, Pedagogy, writing strategies, writing studies
Volume 1, Number 4 (Spring/Summer 1978)
Tags: postsecondary education, student writing, assessment, Writing Assessment
Volume 15, Number 2 (Fall 1996)
Tags: student writing, writing in the disciplines, humanities, postsecondary education, postsecondary education, Basic Writing

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