computers & writing online 2006
Making Knowledge on the Digital Frontier

Symposium Presentation Descriptions

(click on the title to see a description of that presentation)

 

10:00 - 11:00 a.m. Session I

  1. "Blogging Science: The Sociology and Rhetoric of Scientific Knowledge Production Online." Aimee Kendall Roundtree, Univ. of Houston—Downtown

  2. "Bill Gates: America's #1 Teacher of Writing?" Talinn Phillips, Ohio University.

  3. "Empowering the Silent Minority: Invisible Students in a Hybrid Writing Class."  Robin Evans, Oklahoma State University

  4. "Facebook, Online Student Networking, and Strategically Designed Student Selves."  Spencer Schaffner, Center for Writing Studies, Univ. of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.

11:15 a.m. - 12:15 p.m. Session II

  1. "Making Knowledge in a Multimedia Authoring Minor: The Interface Between Professional Writing & Rhetoric and Computer Science."  Paula Rosinski, Elon University.

  2. "Pre-History and Image-Making: A Case History Examining Early Design Practices." Lisa Baird, Purdue University North Central

  3. "Can Blogs Foster an Interest in Writing?: An Analysis of a Blog Assignment in the Composition I Classroom."  Rob Koch, Gordon College.

  4. "Writing Ourselves: Voices in the Virtual Stream." Sabrina Gaskill, Mesalands Community College.

1:15 - 2:30 p.m. Keynote Conversation

"Computers & Writing—A Discipline?" Cynthia Selfe, Fred Kemp, James Inman, and Cheryl Ball. 

 

 

10:00 - 11:00 a.m. Session I

"Blogging Science: The Sociology and Rhetoric of Scientific Knowledge Production Online." Aimee Kendall Roundtree, Univ. of Houston—Downtown

Blogs have gained popularity, influence and controversy. Today, it’s estimated that the Internet contains over four million blogs. Many serve as the writers’ diaries or journals; they share mundane observations and epiphanies. Still others espouse particular political views. Of late, blog have made headway in scientific community. Surprisingly, scientists have embraced the media with minimal self-reflection. A search in popular scientific academic journals and para-publications such as Scientific American and Nature uncovered no heated debates over blog legitimacy to rival those currently underway in broadcast journalism.

 

My presentation accomplish two ends: (1) to categorize scientific blogs into identifiable and differentiated types and (2) to evaluate how scientific blogging differs from articles, presentations and emails—three other modes of scientific writing and communication. It will examine two objects of study—one from the Los Alamos National Lab and RealClimate—to show that scientific blogs hybridize discursive patterns, rhetorical purposes, and formal components common to multiple traditional scientific genre. Scientific blogs also expose cultural, social and subjective factors influence the production and proliferation of scientific knowledge; to this end, they have both personal and professional implications for scientists. I will use Bazerman, Gross, and Swales to frame rhetorical and linguistic style typical of scientific articles. And I’ll use Hert and Lewenstein, Rzepa, Johnson and Pinch to discuss scientific web sites, emails and presentations.

 

"Bill Gates: America's #1 Teacher of Writing?" Talinn Phillips, Ohio University.

As Microsoft's WORD program continues to dominate the market, many writing teachers have become concerned about this domination and also question the usefulness of many features. Given that there are more copies of WORD in the U.S. than English teachers (McGee and Ericsson), Bill Gates' inanimate program is quite possibly having a greater impact on Americans' writing than anyone else. A critical examination of WORD's implicit pedagogy therefore has important implications for writers and the teaching of writing. The goal of this synchronous session, then, is to give WORD a comprehensive rhetorical critique. What kind of argument is Word making about the nature of writing? How does it implicitly define “good” writing through its programming choices (Selfe and Selfe)? And as scholars like Welch and Lanham have worked to draw our attention beyond the power of one particular program to the ramifications of word processing itself, it's important to ask: How does WORD fit into the larger context of typing words on a "page" instead of writing them?

 

I will argue that WORD's argument is, essentially, confused-that while many of the more critiqued aspects of the program encourage a product-privileged pedagogy of writing, that other, less discussed components of the program support a more process-oriented pedagogy. Further, that we can understand this confusion as WORD situated in both literacy and secondary orality (Ong). This “and” perspective of the program reflects not only the pedagogies it supports, but also the “and”ness of the medium itself.

 

"Empowering the Silent Minority: Invisible Students in a Hybrid Writing Class."  Robin Evans, Oklahoma State University

While such scholars as Cynthia Selfe, Gail Hawisher, and Todd Taylor have drawn scholarly attention to the dangers and opportunities afforded to at-risk minority students in computer-mediated composition classes, there has been scant attention paid to the impact of technology on the participation of minority students when the instructor herself is a member of a minority group. In this paper, I argue that even as African-American students are more willing to communicate with their African-American instructors, they remain disinclined to voice their opinions to those Anglo students who comprise the classroom majority. I demonstrate that a combination of individual mentoring and online discussion empowers the voices of minority students in the writing classroom and increases their investment in talking and learning about writing. Given educators’ concerns with technology, student retention and the interaction of these two dynamics, such an inquiry seems particularly timely.

 

My focus is on those students who used technology to integrate their personal identity into their classroom persona. Several minority students, as well as quiet mainstream students, enjoyed the freedom of being honest online without confrontations or interruptions. One African American male student was nearly failing at midterm. With a combination of online communication, as well as tutoring and mentoring after class, he completed the class with a “B” average. Three of the six minority students dropped their enrollment in their second composition class because their current instructors did not blend technology into instruction.


"Facebook, Online Student Networking, and Strategically Designed Student Selves."  Spencer Schaffner, Center for Writing Studies, Univ. of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.

As those of us who teach about emerging media and composition know, it can sometimes be hard to keep up with our students' technological literate practices. Early in 2004, the social networking software Facebook was launched, and it currently supports between 2 and 5 million users. All students in my courses use Facebook, and it is safe to say that almost all college- and high-school-level classes have students who "facebook" one another. Like Myspace, Livejournal, and other online social networking software, Facebook enables the strategic alphabetic and visual presentation of literate selves in networked relationship with other users. Facebook, however, is a particularly scholastic manifestation of social networking software.

 

Through discussions with my students at the University of Illinois, examination of current online discussions of Facebook, and examination of the forum as a faculty-user, I have compiled a set of working observations about this social networking technology as it is situated in practice. In this presentation I will align those observations with developing analysis from multiple theoretical frames. By evoking social network theory (as implemented by Lesley Milroy in her Belfast study), I plan to explore the ways Facebook profiles enact and celebrate the strategic representation of the academic "face" (as synecdochic self) while succumbing to auto- representation via a list of predetermined attributes. I also plan to analyze visual representations of the self to the extent that such uses of the visual reveal ways that auto-ethnographic representations now reposition the types of images found by Hawisher and Sullivan (1999). Though I will engage in textual analysis of facebook.com, no identities will be revealed and I will describe only the relationships between platform and conventionalized practice, thus not presenting research about human subjects per se.

 

 

11:15 a.m. - 12:15 p.m. Session II

"Making Knowledge in a Multimedia Authoring Minor: The Interface Between Professional Writing & Rhetoric and Computer Science."  Paula Rosinski, Elon University.

 

I will discuss the strengths and weaknesses of a new Multimedia Authoring Minor at my primarily undergraduate liberal arts university and consider what kinds of knowledge it creates. This interdisciplinary minor spans the disciplines of Professional Writing and Rhetoric, Digital Art, and Computer Science.  It was designed to address the need for students to develop communication, design, and technology skills in the context of disciplinary content, and its goal is to give students the theoretical and practical experiences necessary to create interactive new media productions.  This minor is unusual in that it encourages collaboration among humanities and science students; it brings together faculty from diverse disciplines to co-teach; it works from the assumption that writing, visual design, and computer science are becoming inextricably linked; and it emphasizes that creating new media productions requires authors to make a wide range of rhetorical decisions, not only in terms of content but in terms of technological decisions as well.  

 

I will also consider questions such as: What kinds of assumptions about language, writing, and design do students from different majors bring to the minor?  Do students end up with a richer understanding of multimedia writing and the role rhetoric plays in such productions?  How might the minor be revised so that it better achieves its goals? 

 

 

"Pre-History and Image-Making: A Case History Examining Early Design Practices." Lisa Baird, Purdue University North Central

 

Visual theorists such as Jay David Bolter and Lester Faigley have argued that the increased use of computer-mediated writing compels the field of composition to consider the nature of image-making as a textual practice. These theorists turn to historical examples in order to understand the nature of modern image-making. This paper extends the arguments of Bolter and Faigley by presenting a case history of visual representation from Upper Paleolithic cave drawings. In the past, Upper Paleolithic people created images of their world. Along with images, these artists used symbols as well as pictures, indicating that humans had already begun to formulate abstract signs to stand for language.

 

In today’s visually-rich digital environment, a study of the early pictorial representations of Upper Paleolithic people gives insight into 1) the interanimation of both images and symbols, particularly with regard to the way in which the technology allows and constrains the messages that are possible; 2) the formalization of textual conventions; and 3) the way images and symbols have been/can be treated in the same space, including interactive engagement with textual messages

 

"Can Blogs Foster an Interest in Writing?: An Analysis of a Blog Assignment in the Composition I Classroom."  Rob Koch, Gordon College.

 

Can blogs be used to encourage writing beyond the Composition I semester? What should a blog assignment look like so that it allows students to build interest in blogging or journaling? Students enrolled in three computer classroom sections of Gordon College’s ENGL 1101: College Composition I during the Fall 05 semester were asked to produce weblogs as part of the course. The students were surveyed at the start, middle, and end of the semester to assess their prior blog/journal experience, their perceptions of the blog assignment at each point, and whether or not the blog activity has encouraged them to continue writing after the semester.

 

This teacher research study analyzes the collected data to determine the value of the writing assignment for encouraging students to write in journals or blogs after the end of the Composition I course. Since the research pool is composed primarily of non-traditional and academically under-prepared students, the findings are most applicable to open-enrollment and community/junior college communities.

 

"Writing Ourselves: Voices in the Virtual Stream." Sabrina Gaskill, Mesalands Community College.

 

Virtual communities are evolving through media processes such as blogs, web sites, Wiki, WebCT, and gaming. Marginalized voices are emerging through a variety of distinct subcultures. These communities are now gaining rapid world wide interest as social and educational forces, and perhaps even as partakers in redefining how we perceive literacy. The Chronicle of Higher Education has featured a variety of articles discouraging faculty from blogging. Gaming and visual representations are frequently censored in many school computer labs, creating a rich environment for the emergence of subcultures. This surfacing of language, visualization, and sound reinvents how we frame ourselves as writers, communicators, and ultimately human beings.

 

Writing Ourselves will encourage participants to engage in the virtual stream. The merging of textual and visual methods into the realms of cyberspace will reveal participant communication practices in the growing area of technological discourse.

 

 

1:15 - 2:30 p.m. Conversation

"Computers & Writing—A Discipline?" Cynthia Selfe, Fred Kemp, James Inman, and Cheryl Ball. 

What defines Computers & Writing as a discipline?  Is it a discipline? What distinguishes it from the discipline of Composition and Rhetoric, for example, or Technical Communication? What research and what theory inform its pedagogy and practice?  How are we defined on the job market and then what roles do we play within our academic departments?

 

Computers and Writing Online 2006, "Making Knowledge on the Digital Frontier," is the companion conference to Computers and Writing 2006, held May 25-28, 2006, at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, Texas. Graphics from freefoto.com.



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