Across the Disciplines

9 articles
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race and writing ×

January 2023

  1. ePortfolios to Promote Equity, Engaged Learning, and Professional Identity Development in STEM
    doi:10.37514/atd-j.2023.20.3-4.07
  2. A Dual Mission: Antiracist Writing Instruction and Instructor Attitudes about Student Language
    doi:10.37514/atd-j.2023.20.1-2.04

January 2021

  1. A Continuum of Archival Custody: Community-Driven Projects as a Path toward Equity
    doi:10.37514/atd-j.2021.18.1-2.07

January 2020

  1. Designing a racial project for WAC: International teaching assistants and translational consciousness
    doi:10.37514/atd-j.2020.17.1-2.03
  2. A Review of Writing Assessment, Social Justice, and the Advancement of Opportunity, edited by Mya Poe, Asao B. Inoue, and Norbert Elliot. (2018). The WAC Clearinghouse; University Press of Colorado. 438 pages. [ISBN 978-1-64215-015-5]
    doi:10.37514/atd-j.2020.17.3.04

January 2013

  1. Critical Race Theory Counterstory as Allegory: A Rhetorical Trope to Raise Awareness About Arizona's Ban on Ethnic Studies
    doi:10.37514/atd-j.2013.10.3.08
  2. "Going there": Peer Writing Consultants' Perspectives on the New Racism and Peer Writing Pedagogies
    doi:10.37514/atd-j.2013.10.3.07
  3. Making Commitments to Racial Justice Actionable
    Abstract

    In this article, we articulate a framework for making our commitments to racial justice actionable, a framework that moves from narrating confessional accounts to articulating our commitments and then acting on them through both self-work and work-with-others, a dialectic possibility we identify and explore. We model a method for moving beyond originary confessional narratives and engage in dialogue with "the willingness to be disturbed," (Wheatley, 2002) believing that disturbances are productive places from which we can more clearly articulate and act from our commitments. Drawing on our own experiences, we engage the political, systemic, and enduring nature of racism as we together chart an educational frame that counters the macro-logics of oppression enacted daily through micro-inequities. As we advocate for additional and ongoing considerations of the work of anti-racism in educational settings, we invite others to embrace, along with us, both the willingness to be disturbed and the attention to making commitments actionable.

    doi:10.37514/atd-j.2013.13.3.10
  4. Re-Framing Race in Teaching Writing Across the Curriculum
    Abstract

    Although faculty across the curriculum are often faced with issues of racial identity in the teaching of writing, WAC has offered little support for addressing race in assignment design, classroom interactions, and assessment. Through examples from teaching workshops, I offer specific ways that we can engage discussions about teaching writing and race productively.

    doi:10.37514/atd-j.2013.10.3.06