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Writing The Classroom Pedagogical Documents As Rhetorical Genres Stephen E Neaderhiser

  • SKU: BELL-52690162
Writing The Classroom Pedagogical Documents As Rhetorical Genres Stephen E Neaderhiser
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Writing The Classroom Pedagogical Documents As Rhetorical Genres Stephen E Neaderhiser instant download after payment.

Publisher: Utah State University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.66 MB
Pages: 327
Author: Stephen E. Neaderhiser, (ed.)
ISBN: 9781646422920, 9781646422913, 1646422929, 1646422910
Language: English
Year: 2022

Product desciption

Writing The Classroom Pedagogical Documents As Rhetorical Genres Stephen E Neaderhiser by Stephen E. Neaderhiser, (ed.) 9781646422920, 9781646422913, 1646422929, 1646422910 instant download after payment.

Writing the Classroom explores how faculty compose and use pedagogical documents to establish classroom expectations and teaching practices, as well as to articulate the professional identities they perform both inside and outside the classroom.
The contributors to this unique collection employ a wide range of methodological frameworks to demonstrate how pedagogical genres—even ones as seemingly straightforward as the class syllabus—have lives extending well beyond the classroom as they become part of how college teachers represent their own academic identities, advocate for pedagogical values, and negotiate the many external forces that influence the act of teaching. Writing the Classroom shines a light on genres that are often treated as two-dimensional, with purely functional purposes, arguing instead that genres like assignment prompts, course proposals, teaching statements, and policy documents play a fundamental role in constructing the classroom and the broader pedagogical enterprise within academia.
Writing the Classroom calls on experienced teachers and faculty administrators to critically consider their own engagement with pedagogical genres and offers graduate students and newer faculty insight into the genres that they may only now be learning to inhabit as they seek to establish their personal teacherly identities. It showcases the rhetorical complexity of the genres written in the service of pedagogy not only for students but also for the many other audiences within academia that have a role in shaping the experience of teaching.

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