dwctop25orientation

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Teaching Composition in a Digital Age

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Page 1: Dwctop25orientation

Teaching Composition in a Digital Age

Page 2: Dwctop25orientation

How can the DWC help?

• “Lunch with the dwc” pedagogy discussion group

• Hands-on software workshops• Individual consultations• In-Class software workshops (for your

students)• Teacher Inquiry Groups• Audio recorders

Page 3: Dwctop25orientation

Tech Support on Campus

Teacher Station problems: 513-529-7900 (dial 9)

Campus IT support (for student laptops):[email protected]://ithelp.muohio.edu103 robertson hall

Page 4: Dwctop25orientation

Digital technologies have changed the processes, spaces, and products of writing.

Page 5: Dwctop25orientation

Digital media allow for the increased integration of images and audio into texts.

Page 6: Dwctop25orientation

Networked connectivity presents new rhetorical situations and potentially global audiences for communicating.

Page 7: Dwctop25orientation

An overabundance of (mis)information on the Web requires increasingly sophisticated research skills.

Page 8: Dwctop25orientation

Digital technologies can enhance the invention of alphabetic texts.

Page 9: Dwctop25orientation

Theories of Rhetoric and Composing Process Can Be (Somewhat) Transferable Across Media.

Page 10: Dwctop25orientation

Okay, but how can laptops enhance the teaching of conventional academic writing?

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Invention

• Students post questions about the assignment prompt (when first distributed)

• Freewriting to generate ideas• “Zero draft” (for peer response)• Multimodal cluster mapping (with prezi)• Aural brainstorming sessions (with notes

recorded online)

Page 12: Dwctop25orientation

Web Research

• Investigating credibility of web sources• Comparing media coverage in different outlets• Reflectively using library databases

(comparing results gathered with different search strategies)

• Conducting online contextual research about a text discussed in class

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Rhetorical Analysis / Critical Reading

• Posting questions to discussion board• Reading response posts (write for homework,

make peer comments in class)• Small group presentations analyzing a part of

a text• Small group presentations explaining a

rhetorical term

Page 14: Dwctop25orientation

Peer Response

• One discussion board forum for each group.• Write comments in MS word (following

specific prompts).• Post reflection about what revisions they plan

to make.

Page 15: Dwctop25orientation

Revision

• Reviewing drafts to look for particular writing concerns; posting reflections about planned revisions.

• Translate a paper draft into an informal multimedia presentation.

• Group editing of sample texts for style / conciseness.

Page 16: Dwctop25orientation

Reflection

• Last 3-5 minutes of class: post one concept you learned and one question you have.

• 15 minute in-class reflective writing about learning and/or writing process.

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Teaching Media Inquiry I

• Focus on transferable concepts of rhetoric and process

• Scaffold the assignment (proposal, multiple drafts) and build in reflection throughout

• Critically investigate the unique affordances of differing modalities (aural, alphabetic, visual)

• Give a focused assignment (and then let students negotiate options)

Page 18: Dwctop25orientation

Teaching Media Inquiry II

• Develop evaluative criteria collaboratively with students (by rhetorically analyzing sample texts).

• Provide or arrange for an in-class workshop about any required technologies (20-50 minutes).

• Address issues of “Fair Use” and Copyright

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Possibilities for Media Inquiry

• Live Presentation (possibly with PowerPoint)• Online Slideshow Presentation (PowerPoint +

Slideboom)• Audio PSA, audio documentary, or audio essay

(audacity)• Video PSA (iMovie; Moviemaker)• Website or blog (using wix.com or

wordpress.com)

Page 20: Dwctop25orientation

Contact:

Jason Palmeri (Bac 366; [email protected])

Scott Wagar(Bac 307; [email protected])