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Writing in the Research University: A Darwinian Study of WID with Cases from Civil Engineering [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 336 pages, kaal: 516 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Aug-2011
  • Kirjastus: Hampton Press
  • ISBN-10: 1572739010
  • ISBN-13: 9781572739017
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 336 pages, kaal: 516 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Aug-2011
  • Kirjastus: Hampton Press
  • ISBN-10: 1572739010
  • ISBN-13: 9781572739017
Teised raamatud teemal:
How do engineers learn to think and write like engineers? How do art historians learn to think and write like art historians? How do journalists or biologists learn to think and write like the professionals that they become? Do we learn to think and write primarily by enculturationor can we be taught how to write in various disciplines? If anything can be taught, what practices stand out as best practices?

Needed to address these questions is a cohesive theory of writing-in-the-disciplines (WID), one that accounts for both discipline-specific features of writing and features that cut across many disciplines. To that end, this book re-examines contemporary sociohistoric theories of writing from an evolutionary perspective. An evolutionary perspective of WID suggests that disciplines not only change, but they evolve much like species do, via a dual process of variation and selection in forums of competition. An evolutionary perspective puts a spotlight on what endures as well as what changes in the complexes of academic arguments.

Needed as well are more situated studies of writing, particularly on the department level: situated studies in which the human organism is observed functioning in its disciplinary environment. This book examines just one disciplinecivil engineeringvia a series of interrelated case studies of undergraduates, graduate students, tutors, faculty, and alumni, not practicing engineers in industry.
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1(14)
WID: Undertheorized
1(3)
WID: Under 40
4(1)
Defining Boundary Conditions
5(1)
Using an Evolutionary Analogy to Explore Writing in the Disciplines
6(1)
Defining Evolution
6(1)
"Positive" Elements of the Evolutionary Analogy
7(1)
"Problem" Elements of the Evolutionary Analogy
8(1)
Listening and Striving for Consilience
9(6)
I A THEORY OF WRITING IN THE DISCIPLINES
Chapter 1 Darwin's Legacy for a Theory of WID
15(12)
Theories of Disciplinarity: Kuhn's Non-Darwinian Model
15(1)
Kuhn's Non-Darwinian Model and Studies of Writing
16(1)
Defining a Paradigm for Writing
17(2)
Incommensurability
19(1)
Objections to Kuhn's Model for Disciplinary Change
19(2)
Theories of Disciplinarity: Toulmin's Darwinian Model
21(1)
Darwinian Theory of Disciplinarity and Writing Studies
22(1)
Writing Studies Debates a Post-Process Paradigm
23(4)
Chapter 2 Evolution of Genre and Rational Activity in Discipline-Specific Environments
27(14)
Sociohistoric Accounts of Genre in Any Discipline
27(1)
Miller's Redefinition of Genre
28(2)
Genre as a Process for Mediating Change and Stability
30(2)
The Genealogy of Genres: Beyond the Individual and the Present
32(1)
Historical Accounts of Genre Expose Rhetorical, Changing Elements
32(1)
Historical Accounts of Genre also Expose Enduring, More Stable Elements
33(1)
Historical Accounts: Open-Ended Potential for Critique
34(1)
Triangulation: Reconstructing Epistemology in Evolutionary Terms
35(1)
Justification: The Heart of Academic Argumentation (and Rhetoric)
36(1)
Procedures Carried Out in Open Forums of Competition
37(1)
Invariants May Elude Us Degree---But Are Still Worth Reaching For
38(1)
A Darwinian Account of Academic Arguments
39(2)
Chapter 3 A Trio of Evolutionary Theorists: Toulmin, Bourdieu, and Gibson
41(20)
Toulmin's Evolutionary Analogy for Disciplinarity
42(7)
Intersections Between Toulmin and Bourdieu
49(2)
Intersections Among Toulmin, Bourdieu, and Gibson
51(2)
The Evolutionary Bush
53(8)
II RESEARCH: AN ETHNOGRAPHIC STUDY OF ONE DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL ENGINEERING
Chapter 4 A Population of Engineers
61(16)
Under What Conditions Do Engineers Function as a Discourse Community?
61(2)
Three Dispositions: The Expert, the Maverick, and the Technophile
63(1)
Two Other Dispositions: The Macho and the Noncommunicator
63(2)
Critiquing the Image of the Noncommunicator: Survey and Interview Data
65(1)
The Enculturation of Walter as an Engineer and Writer
66(1)
Invitations (or Affordances) in Walter's Environment
67(1)
Among Walter's Affordances: Literary Sponsors
68(2)
A Particular Affordance: Public Recognition
70(1)
Another Affordance: Aptitude
71(2)
Rewards and Reinforcement
73(1)
Double Translation: Special Challenges Facing Technical Writers
74(1)
What Walter Tells Us
75(2)
Chapter 5 Situated Cognition: The Case of Deepak
77(28)
This Study in Context
78(1)
The Coding Scheme: Another Affordance
79(3)
Practical Reasoning: Tapping Both Open-Ended Regularities and Closed Rules
82(1)
No Genome Stands Outside of History, and Yet Some Genomes Are Very Stable
83(1)
The Double Helix Model for Situated Cognition
84(4)
A Sociohistoric Revision of Perry's Theory of Intellectual Development
88(3)
The Soft and Hard Legs of the Helix Revealed in Deepak's Arguments
91(5)
A Closer Look at the Commenting Data
96(1)
The Gradual Tightening of the Double Helix
97(2)
Even Without a Model for Informal Reasoning, Bowders Provided Exceptional Feedback
99(3)
Conclusion
102(3)
Chapter 6 Innovation: When Civil Engineers Compose Arguments
105(32)
Learning to Write: Learning the Rules and Playing the Game
106(3)
Other Theories and Practices That Inform the Following Case Studies
109(1)
Pioneering Studies of Writing in Engineering
109(3)
The Case of Mike: Learning by Fire
112(3)
The Case of John: A Prolific Writer
115(4)
The Case of Carolina: Seeking Creative Outlets
119(4)
The Case of Ron: Stepping Out of High School Into MODoT
123(3)
The Case of Ted: Serving a Local Sewer District
126(4)
Composing Processes of Engineers: Mozarts or Beethovens?
130(4)
Conclusion
134(3)
Chapter 7 Forums of Competition: Selecting Standards That Shape Writing
137(22)
The Pool Variants: Erasures and Gaps
139(1)
Engineering Problems: Intersections of Science and Society
140(1)
Solving Engineering Problems: The Politics of Funding
140(4)
Corporate Standards and the Selection Process
144(2)
A Mixture of Standards Shaping Civil Engineering Documents
146(2)
Peer Review: The Forum of Competition With the Most Rigorous Technical Standards
148(1)
Other Studies of Peer Review
149(1)
MU Engineers' Perceptions of Peer Review
150(7)
Other Filtering Processes
157(2)
Chapter 8 Replication of Engineering Arguments: Teaching and Learning to Write
159(34)
The Enculturation of John Bowders's Undergraduate Civil Engineering Students
160(2)
Critical Feedback Needed to Check Complacency
162(1)
When Writing Matters
163(1)
Barriers to Writing: In the Student or in the Environment?
164(5)
Conflicting Advice About Procedural Knowledge: How-to Advice About Writing
169(1)
Simple But Deceptive Writing Advice
170(2)
Problem-Based Versus Procedural Writing Texts
172(3)
Replication Through School-Based Assignments
175(13)
Beyond Procedural Genre Knowledge: Making the Professional Turn
188(5)
Chapter 9 Replication of Academic Arguments in a CEE Master's Program
193(30)
A Graduate Course on Seepage in Soils
194(1)
Bowders's Written Comments
195(2)
Student Revision
197(1)
Tom's Writing
198(2)
Hema's Writing
200(4)
Rebecca's Writing
204(5)
Comparing Graduate and Undergraduate Students' Case Histories
209(8)
The Importance of Communicating Criteria and Providing Time and Feedback
217(2)
Implications of Sociohistoric Studies for Assessment
219(4)
III THEORY AND RESEARCH MEET PRACTICE
Chapter 10 Environment: Creating a Culture of Writing in Engineering
223(28)
Alumni and Faculty Speak Out
224(4)
Curriculum as Cultural Affordance: The Well-Rounded Engineer
228(1)
Institutional Barriers to the Teaching of Writing
229(2)
Attempts at Integrating Writing Throughout the Engineering Curriculum
231(1)
Integrating Writing in Civil Engineering at MU
232(1)
Brainstorming an NSF CCLI Grant: From WI to Department-wide
233(4)
Writing as Rule-Governed Product Versus Writing as Complex Activity
237(2)
Next Steps in Implementing an Integrated Writing Program
239(12)
Chapter 11 Writing in Other Disciplines: Designing Ideal Writing Environments
251(22)
Enculturation Broadly Defined
251(1)
Recognizing "The One and the Many" in Genre Systems: In Programs, in Courses, in Assignments
252(1)
Introductory Materials Privilege "The One" over "The Many"
253(1)
From Best Practices to Curricular Affordances
253(1)
Identifying Standards and Conditions Under Which They Apply
254(8)
Assignment-Specific Evaluation Rubrics
262(1)
The Risk of Underdescribing Both Genre and Sentence-Level Conventions
263(1)
Situated Writing Lessons
264(1)
WAC/WID Programs in Institutional Context
265(1)
Necessary Versus Sufficient Writing Experiences: One Course is Not Enough
266(2)
Beyond Discipline-Based Variables
268(1)
The Question of Transfer and Assessment
269(2)
Evaluating Writers and Writing Programs
271(1)
Conclusion
272(1)
Chapter 12 Well, If Not an Ending, It Is a Beginning
273(10)
Something a Little Bit Old
274(1)
Something a Little Bit New
275(2)
Theories on the Composing Process, From the Romans to Rohman and Beyond
277(1)
Sociohistoric Research Methods
278(3)
Open-Ended Discussion
281(2)
Notes 283(12)
References 295(14)
Author Index 309(4)
Subject Index 313