Monday, September 20, 2010

Movement

My comps questions went out to my committee today. This is like, a whole 2-3 weeks ahead of my timeline, which feels really good. I guess now, I just await the comments and requested revisions. Ever since I've sent them out, anytime an email pops up, I keep hoping it is one of them with comments. I guess maybe this is the hard part - waiting.

It still feels like a weight off for right now.

The final questions that went to the committee are as follows:

Composition Core
Since the advent of the computer in the classroom, the impact of technology on student learning has been widely discussed in the field of computers and writing. In her text, (Selfe, 1999) notes the importance of educators “paying attention” in order to integrate computer technology in the classroom in socially viable and critically engaged ways. In your response, consider the issues of access and power relations evident in using technology in the writing classroom. Then, take this issues under consideration, as well as the work of prominent scholars in the field (Gee, Hawisher, Yancey) to create a teaching philosophy specific to using computers in the classroom.

Cultural/Critical Studies Core

The concept of culture and cultural differences is popularly used in modern scholarship in a variety of disciplines, including rhetoric and professional communication. To understand the undeniable influence of critical/cultural studies in our and other fields, it is useful to first clarify the troubled and troubling term “culture.” Citing theorists and critics in the field, offer your own definition of culture. In crafting this definition also consider competing voices in this debate. What resistance might one find to labeling certain people or traditions as one culture or another?

Technical/Professional Communication Core

New technologies for writing and communication have radically changed the ways in which professional communicators interact and the ways in which work is composed. A number of scholars (e.g. The New London Group, iText Working Group, Cargile Cook, Wysocki, Yancey) argue that being literate in today’s society requires and ability to read and compose in a multitude of forms and media. This is particularly true of those responsible for developing texts on complex subject matter that are aimed at large and diverse audiences. Drawing on the relevant literatures, your coursework, and your own experience, address the various ways multimodal communication affect traditional notions of texts, literacy and communication and what are the most significant implications for technical and professional communication?

Specialized

Many scholars (Ochs, Trimbur) argue that rituals of consolation should be viewed as inherently rhetorical due to the various concerns of both the commemorative speaker and the audiences. More recently, Carole Blair has looked at the different modes audiences use to commemorate at both the Vietnam Veterans Memorial and the AIDS Quilt. Considering this shift to multimodality in memorials, how are these different rhetorical approaches influencing memorials as they move to online spaces and how are people utilizing multiple modes to commemorate those they have lost?

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