College Composition and Communication

51 articles
Year: Topic: Clear
Export:
qualitative research ×

December 2025

  1. Contextualizing Reflective Writing for Creating Change: A Cross-Institutional Case Study of First-Year Students’ Reflections
    Abstract

    Writing studies scholarship lauds reflection’s capacity for building metacognitive understanding and facilitating transfer. Meanwhile, feminist and antiracist pedagogy scholarship highlights reflection’s ability to create spiritual and societal change. By contextualizing reflection within institutional and programmatic contexts, we argue that writing scholars can revise assignments to account for reflection’s contributions to civic and spiritual identity development. This cross-institutional case study analyzes patterns in first-year students’ reflective writing across three writing programs. Drawing on five codes for reflective identities—scholarly, writerly, professional, civic, and spiritual—we found that scholarly and writerly identities were emphasized regardless of context. However, students often had an “excess” in reflection, writing about civic and spiritual growth when prompts did not invite it. In conversation with university and program mission statements, we argue that instructors and WPAs can leverage reflection to expand beyond a single classroom context, ultimately tapping into its potential to create individual and social change.

    doi:10.58680/ccc2025772289

September 2025

  1. Using the AI Life Cycle to Unblackbox AI Tools: Teaching Résumé 2.0 with Résumé Analytics and Computational Job-Résumé Matching
    Abstract

    In response to disruptions introduced to the job market by AI resume screeners, this article introduces a novel theoretical framework for the life cycle of artificial intelligence systems to help unblackbox resume screening AI systems. It then applies the AI life cycle framework to a digital case study of RChilli’s job-resume matching algorithm. The article introduces an eleven-step computational job-resume matching assignment that writing instructors can use in their classrooms to explore the pedagogical implications offered by the AI life cycle framework. The assignment helps students simulate important phases in AI production and development while highlighting biases and ethical concerns in AI screening of resumes. By exploring job-resume analytics, this study helps to teach critical AI and data literacy, make job-resume matching algorithms more explainable, and transform how professional writing can be taught in the age of automated hiring.

    doi:10.58680/ccc2025771112
  2. AI Writing Is Always Embodied: Building a Critical Awareness of the Invisible Labor of Humans-in-the-Loop in AI Products
    Abstract

    I argue that composition studies must build critical awareness about how humans from the Global South train AI with their writing embodiments. To draw our attention to how those working in the Global South train AI in harmful conditions, even though AI companies use algorithms and terms of service to smooth away these embodiments, I adapt the concept of humans-in-the-loop. Critical awareness of humans-in-the-loop moves scholarship in writing studies from a focus on AI-human collaboration that begins after an AI produces a text to one that requires us to see how AI products are always already human authored. Through a case study of Google Translate, I demonstrate how a critical awareness of how AI can erase the writing embodiment of humans-in-the-loop affords me opportunities to ask generative questions: How does language translation play a role in the erasure of embodied writing? Why does AI produce with bias toward marginalized populations when marginalized populations are those that moderate AI? Overall, I ask compositionists to see AI products as already human authored so that writing studies can consider the invisible labor of humans-in-the-loop as the field moves forward in researching AI.

    doi:10.58680/ccc202577139

June 2025

  1. Writing for Perspective: A Case Study of Literacy Practices and Personal Agency among Latinos/Latinas in Northwest Arkansas
    Abstract

    Extracting a writer’s profile from a broader literacy study aimed at documenting extracurricular literacy practices among the Latinx population in Northwest Arkansas, this article presents a case study of a Peruvian woman’s lifelong use of literacy to enhance her personal agency in the face of personal, social, and civic demands. The article presents the writer’s profile as an indicator of the various literacy demands faced by the Latinx community and suggests that a critical consideration of such demands may lead to improved understanding and theorizing of writing through a lifespan writing research lens. Such a reorientation to writing may have a beneficial impact on first-year college composition courses by cultivating pedagogical practices oriented toward socioculturally diverse student populations and nontraditional students in college-level writing courses.

    doi:10.58680/ccc2025764567

September 2024

  1. Embracing Wobble: Mentoring Graduate Instructors in Big Composition
    Abstract

    We report our qualitative study on two graduate student instructors’ experiences teaching alongside an experienced professor in an experimental super-sized first-year writing class. Using the framework of wobble (Fecho et al), we explore how mentors can help novice teachers navigate moments of destabilization and uncertainty.

    doi:10.58680/ccc202476135

June 2024

  1. Acts of Recognition: A Study of Faculty Writers’ Experiences of Engaging Peer Review
    Abstract

    This study examines how ten faculty at research-intensive institutions work with peer reviews, a process with potential to support faculty writing development and that plays a central evaluative role in professional success. The grounded theory approach revealed the importance of acts of recognition in the peer review process, facilitating a more collaborative experience.

    doi:10.58680/ccc2024754620
  2. Challenging the Myth of the Traditional Grad Student: A Case Study about Academic Enculturation and Resistance
    Abstract

    Drawing from a qualitative study, this article advocates for challenging myths about the traditional graduate student. We discuss how these myths create a sense of unbelonging for graduate students, and we call attention to the exigency for transforming graduate programs to validate and sustain students’ diverse literacies and linguistic resources.

    doi:10.58680/ccc2024754728

September 2023

  1. Community-Based Temporal Practices for Creating Change in Hostile Institutional Systems
    Abstract

    This article, based on an interview study with community changemakers working within hostile systems of higher education and legislative politics, builds upon scholarship that names and challenges normative time by offering a cultural rhetorics analysis of activists’ alternative, community-based temporal practices that are centered in relationships and prioritize participant needs over institutional mandates. We theorize community-based temporal practices based on the changemaking stories of our interview participants, especially moments when they encountered time-based obstacles and used community-based knowledges as workarounds. We constellate these stories about the material barriers of time, the way time is wielded by those in power, and how to prioritize relationships, thus illuminating temporal practices that can be used to challenge institutional systems.

    doi:10.58680/ccc202332675

July 2023

  1. Shaping Emerging Community-Engaged Scholars’ Identities: A Genre Systems Analysis of Professionalization Documents that (De)Value Engaged Work
    Abstract

    This article presents the findings from a small case study to examine how community-engaged research is systemically delegitimized over the course of a scholar’s career. Analyzing a genre system of university professionalization documents prior to tenure and promotion shows how such documents discourage emerging scholars from thinking of their community-engaged work as research, except when it results in traditional forms of scholarship like a publication or conference presentation. A more complicated understanding of this genre system reveals pressure points to leverage for institutional change that might allow community-engaged scholars greater institutional freedom to create and sustain strong community partnership projects.

    doi:10.58680/ccc202332519

February 2023

  1. Thinking about Feeling: The Roles of Emotion in Reflective Writing
    Abstract

    Drawing from a qualitative study, we share findings that demonstrate how students articulate and express emotion in reflection. As they reflect on their writing identities, processes and products, peer and instructor feedback, and assess their work, the students in our study routinely discuss their emotions. Our essay closes with pedagogical strategies for helping students reflect on their thinking and feeling about writing.

    doi:10.58680/ccc202332364

September 2022

  1. Theorizing Writing Differently: How Community-Engaged Projects in First-Year Composition Shape Students’ Writing Theories and Strategies
    Abstract

    Based on a qualitative case study of students’ “theory of writing” essays, this study examines ways that first-year students’ community engagement experiences solidify and disrupt their writing knowledge, beliefs, and practices. Analysis of student writing demonstrates how different community-engaged writing projects inform first-year students’ writing theories and strategies.

    doi:10.58680/ccc202232121
  2. Composing Addiction: A Study of the Emotional Dimensions of Writing Processes
    Abstract

    Situated in disability studies, this article shares the results from a qualitative research project that examined how three community college students who wrote about addiction navigated the process-based activities assigned in their first-year writing courses. These findings illuminate how such exercises evoke a spectrum of emotion that shapes both process and product.

    doi:10.58680/ccc202232124

February 2022

  1. Hitting a Brick Wall and the Women Who Do the Work: Is This the Same Old Story?
    Abstract

    Utilizing Sara Ahmed’s work on “brick walls,” this article discusses a qualitative study of stories shared by twenty-five women writing center directors and the possible insights gleaned if we choose to “notice through feminism,” (Ahmed) and advocate for change across writing studies.

    doi:10.58680/ccc202231878

June 2021

  1. Sexual Violences Traveling to El Norte: An Example of Quilting as Method
    Abstract

    This quilt documents sexual violence migrant women experience and demonstrates Quilting as Method, a feminist, qualitative research method. The author argues that tactile approaches to research can deepen understandings of shallowly understood experiences.

    doi:10.58680/ccc202131439

September 2019

  1. A Study of the Practices and Responsibilities of Scholarly Peer Review in Rhetoric and Composition
    Abstract

    This article presents findings of an interview study with twenty rhetoric and composition scholars. Findings focus on the responsibilities of reviewers, editors, and writers in scholarly peer review. The authors make several recommendations for improving peer review practices and call for a field-wide discussion of and research about the topic.

    doi:10.58680/ccc201930297

February 2019

  1. Researching Writing Program Administration Expertise in Action: A Case Study of Collaborative Problem Solving as Transdisciplinary Practice
    Abstract

    Theorizing WPA expertise as problem-oriented, stakeholder-inclusive practice, we apply the twenty-first-century paradigm of transdisciplinarity to a campus WID Initiative to read and argue that data-driven research capturing transdisciplinary WPA methods in action will allow us to better understand, represent, and leverage rhetoric-composition/writing studies’ disciplinary expertise in twenty-first-century higher education.

    doi:10.58680/ccc201929990

December 2017

  1. Cripping Time in the College Composition Classroom
    Abstract

    This article shares findings from a qualitative study on the experiences of students with disabilities in college-level writing and writing-intensive classrooms. I argue that normative conceptions of time and production can negatively constrain student performance, and I offer the concept of crip time (borrowed from disability theorists and disability activists) as an alternative pedagogical framework.

    doi:10.58680/ccc201729419

September 2017

  1. Pretty Bullets: Tracing Transmedia/Translingual Literacies of an Israeli Soldier across Regimes of Practice
    Abstract

    Tracing the literacy practices of an Israeli soldier, this case study examines how his engagement in multilingual and multimodal (MML) composing affects his ways of thinking about and doing literacy. It specifically attends to how MML practices dispose writers to certain orientations to reading, writing, speaking, and design.

    doi:10.58680/ccc201729297

September 2016

  1. Rethinking Regulation in the Age of the Literacy Machine
    Abstract

    Drawing from a large qualitative study, we examine how students experience writing in college, focusing on the conditions that allow students to develop their authorship and those that encourage students to experience writing as a process of following rules and regulations. We situate students’ perceptions, and the assignments and practices that led to them, within what anthropologists call “audit culture”—accounting practices and their technologies, which have migrated across institutions, including higher education. We suggest our field’s institutional status and pedagogical complexities make us especially susceptible to audit culture, and we argue that students’ experiences in our writing classrooms, where they face an ever-increasing bureaucratization of literacy, is an urgent area of research. We ask readers to consider the extent to which audit culture encourages teachers to create closed systems that privilege outcomes rather than consequences with an end-inview. We conclude by calling for an artisanal identity for both teachers and students.

    doi:10.58680/ccc201628757

June 2016

  1. The Pop Warner Chronicles: A Case Study in Contextual Adaptation and the Transfer of Writing Ability
    Abstract

    In this case study, an accomplished academic writer struggles to produce very brief game summaries for a local newspaper as part of the service requirements to his son’s community football team. An analysis of his experience demonstrates the universal challenge of transfer regardless of prior knowledge or meta-awareness of rhetorical strategies for writing in new or unfamiliar settings and argues for a more nuanced understanding of existing ability, disposition, context, and genre in the deployment of knowledge for writing.

    doi:10.58680/ccc201629612

September 2015

  1. Project(ing) Literacy: Writing to Assemble in a Postcomposition FYW Classroom
    Abstract

    In this article, I turn to a grounded theory study that examines the experiences of students participating in an individual project-based FYW course, exploring up close the exploits,—practices, and products of one student “writing to assemble.” I question pedagogy stayed to theory that would treat writing as primarily a technology of representation, and in its place—introduce the concept of “writing as assemblage.” Positing a theory of the writing space that underscores writing’s more generative qualities, I call for a new definition of proficiency—for all manner of first-year writing courses.

    doi:10.58680/ccc201527442

June 2015

  1. Tracing Transfer across Media: Investigating Writers’ Perceptions of Cross-Contextual and Rhetorical Reshaping in Processes of Remediation
    Abstract

    This qualitative study examines how writers perceive the mobilization and adaptation of their print-based writing knowledge and multiple literacies when remediating written essays into digital stories. It also outlines a pedagogical tool that can help writers reflect on what they might transfer as they compose across media.

    doi:10.58680/ccc201527364
  2. “White Guys Who Send My Uncle to Prison”: Going Public within Asymmetrical Power
    Abstract

    Examining the context and production of a community publication, I Witness: Perspectives on Policing in the Near Westside, this essay analyzes the ways in which local neighborhood authors situate themselves rhetorically when engaging with police issues within conditions of asymmetrical power. Furthermore, it describes the collective processes neighborhood residents used to empower their perspectives. The essay applies this case study to debates over open-hand and closed-fist rhetorics and the roles of scholars as sponsors to such rhetorical forms.

    doi:10.58680/ccc201527362

June 2014

  1. The Legal and the Local: Using Disparate Impact Analysis to Understand the Consequences of Writing Assessment
    Abstract

    In this article, we investigate disparate impact analysis as a validation tool for understanding the local effects of writing assessment on diverse groups of students. Using a case study data set from a university that we call Brick City University, we explain how Brick City’s writing program undertook a self-study of its placement exam using the disparate impact process followed by the Office for Civil Rights of the US Department of Education. This three-step process includes analyzing placement rates through (1) a threshold statistical analysis, (2) a contextualized inquiry to determine whether the placement exam meets an important educational objective, and (3) a consideration of less discriminatory assessment alternatives. By employing such a process, Brick City re-conceptualized the role of placement testing and basic writing at the university in a way that was less discriminatory for Brick City’s diverse student population.

    doi:10.58680/ccc201425448

December 2013

  1. Democracy, Struggle, and the Praxis of Assessment
    Abstract

    This article draws on qualitative research conducted as a part of a writing program assessment to examine the relationship between assessment, valuation, and the economics of first-year writing. It argues that the terms of labor in first-year writing complicate practices of valuation and the processes of consensus building that have become common in assessment models. It explains that if assessment is to be situated at a site and represent the work that happens there faithfully, it needs to account for how power, the economics of staffing, and differing ways of thinking about writing education necessitate struggle and the acknowledgment and representation of dissonance.

    doi:10.58680/ccc201324502

February 2013

  1. Motivation and Connection: Teaching Reading (and Writing) in the Composition Classroom
    Abstract

    Drawing on qualitative research conducted at the University of Michigan, this article examines the extent to which composition instructors theorize and teach reading-writing connections and argues that explicitly teaching reading-writing connections may increase student motivation to complete assigned reading. The article also discusses using model texts as an effective means of teaching those connections.

    doi:10.58680/ccc201322720
  2. African American Language, Rhetoric, and Students’ Writing: New Directions for SRTOL
    Abstract

    This article offers a case study of how three African American students enrolled in a first-year writing course employ Ebonics-based phonological and syntactical patterns across writing assignments, including those that also require students to compose multigenre essays.

    doi:10.58680/ccc201322719

December 2012

  1. Training in the Archives: Archival Research as Professional Development
    Abstract

    This article describes the rationale and efficacy of a graduate-level teaching module providing loosely structured practice with real archives. Introducing early career scholarsto archival methods changed their beliefs about knowledge, research, teaching, and their discipline(s). This case study suggests that archives can be productive training spacesfor all writing studies researchers.

    doi:10.58680/ccc201222115

September 2012

  1. Institutional Ethnography as Materialist Framework for Writing Program Research and the Faculty-Staff Work Standpoints Project
    Abstract

    Institutional ethnography seeks to uncover how things happen—how institutional discourse compels and shapes practice(s) and how norms of practice speak to, for, and overindividuals. The Faculty and Staff Standpoints project is shaped by this methodology, as it explores writing center staff and faculty relationships to their work.

    doi:10.58680/ccc201220863

June 2011

  1. Special Symposium Commemorating the NCTE/CCCC Relationship
    Abstract

    Review of A Long Way Together and Reading the Past, Writing the Future ,Barbara L’Eplattenier Seeking Connections, Articulating Commonalities: English Education, Composition Studies, and Writing Teacher Education, Janet Alsup, Elizabeth Brockman, Jonathan Bush, and Mark Letcher Preparing Writing Teachers: A Case Study in Constructing a More Connected Future for CCCC and NCTE., Shelley Reid Contesting the Space between High School and College in the Era of Dual-Enrollment, Howard Tinberg and Jean-Paul Nadeau

    doi:10.58680/ccc201115875

December 2009

  1. Second Language Users and Emerging English Designs
    Abstract

    As English spreads as an international language, it evolves through diverse users’ writing and speaking. However, traditional views of ESL users focus on their distance from fairly static notions of English-language competence. This research uses a grounded theory approach to describe a range of competencies that emerge in ESL users’ interactions with native-English-speaking peers and instructors.

    doi:10.58680/ccc20099490

September 2009

  1. Adding Value for Students and Faculty with a Master’s Degree in Professional Writing
    Abstract

    This article describes an interdisciplinary professional writing program and its benefits for students (in terms of knowledge, habits of mind, and developing careers). The authors present qualitative research findings about habits of mind and knowledge domains of successful students, which may prove valuable for faculty teaching in similar programs as they consider curriculum design, or for faculty pondering issues of career development for master’s degree graduates.

    doi:10.58680/ccc20098317

June 2009

  1. The Movement of Air, the Breath of Meaning: Aurality and Multimodal Composing
    Abstract

    Rhetoric and composition’s increasing attention to multimodal composing involves challenges that go beyond issues of access to digital technologies and electronic composing environments. As a specific case study, this article explores the history of aural composing modalities (speech, music, sound) and examines how they have been understood and used within English and composition classrooms and generally subsumed by the written word in such settings. I argue that the relationship between aurality (and visual modalities) and writing has limited our understanding of composing as a multimodal rhetorical activity and has thus, deprived students of valuable semiotic resources for making meaning. Further, in light of scholarship on the importance of aurality to different communities and cultures, I argue that our contemporary adherence to alphabetic-only composition constrains the semiotic efforts of individuals and groups who value multiple modalities of expression. I encourage teachers and scholars of composition, and other disciplines, to adopt an increasingly thoughtful understanding of aurality and the role it—and other modalities—can play in contemporary communication tasks.

    doi:10.58680/ccc20097190

September 2007

  1. Accessing Disability: A Nondisabled Student Works the Hyphen
    Abstract

    This article challenges current assumptions about the teaching and assessment of critical thinking in the composition classroom, particularly the practice of measuring critical thinking through individual written texts. Drawing on a case study of a class that incorporated disability studies discourse, and applying discourse analysis to student work, “Accessing Disability” argues that critical thinking can be taught more effectively through multi-modal methods and a de-emphasis on the linear progress narrative.

    doi:10.58680/ccc20076380

December 2005

  1. Reinventing WAC (Again): The First-Year Seminar and Academic Literacy
    Abstract

    Academically oriented first-year seminars can be good venues for teaching many of the concepts important to WAC programs, including extended engagement with a research topic and situated writing. A qualitative study of a first-year seminar program at the University of Calgary highlights faculty members’ and students’ responses.

    doi:10.58680/ccc20054029

June 2004

  1. Edwin Hopkins and the Costly Labor of Composition Teaching
    Abstract

    Using a “historical case study” of Edwin M. Hopkins, this article explores what Bruce Horner calls the “material social conditions” of teaching writing early in the twentieth century. It shows how Hopkins’s own attitude and response to the demands of being a writing teacher serve as a backdrop for understanding his local and national crusade to improve labor conditions for faculty.

    doi:10.58680/ccc20042777

February 2004

  1. Facing (Up To) ‘The Stranger’ in Community Service Learning
    Abstract

    This essay turns to feminist ethnography and postcolonial theory to address how the figure of “the stranger” haunts the project of community service learning. By explicating the immediate and broader relations of power that structure these “strange(r) encounters,” we are more likely to produce the kind of agitated pedagogy that creates opportunities for progressive practices and effects.

    doi:10.58680/ccc20042761

December 2003

  1. Education Reform and the Limits of Discourse: Rereading Collaborative Revision of a Composition Program’s Textbook
    Abstract

    This article links failed reform to failed education through a case study of an annual collaborative revision of a program textbook in the Composition Program at the University of California at Irvine. Review of successive editions of the program’s Student Guide to Writing at UCI reveals a progressive retreat from the program’s pedagogical commitments and the reappearance of product-oriented instruction.

    doi:10.58680/ccc20032746

June 2000

  1. Evaluating Writing Programs in Real Time: The Politics of Remediation
    Abstract

    A case study of the evaluation of a three-year pilot project in mainstreaming basic writers at City College of New York suggests that the social and political contexts of a project need to be taken into account in the earliest stages of evaluation. This project’s complex evaluation report was virtually ignored by college administrators.

    doi:10.58680/ccc20001398

September 1998

  1. Voices and Visions: Refiguring Ethnography in Composition
    doi:10.2307/358370

February 1998

  1. On Writing Qualitative Research: Living by Words
    Abstract

    1.To you from us 2.What is there about writing? 3.Creating forms - informing understanding working in analytic modes 4.Working in interpretive modes 5.Negotiating, collaborating, responding ripples on the self/ripples on others 6.Qualitative research writing - what makes it worthwhile after all?

    doi:10.2307/358568

December 1997

  1. Interchanges: On Objectivity in Qualitative Research
    doi:10.58680/ccc19973167

May 1995

  1. I Came to Believe: Ethnography, Anonymity, and the Private I
    doi:10.2307/358433
  2. Interchanges
    Abstract

    Conflict Pedagogy and Student Experience Ships in the Night Revisited, Gerald Graff, I Came to Believe: Ethnography, Anonymity, and the Private I, Anonymous Response, Beth Daniell, Interpreting Interpretations of Divergence, Thomas G. O’Donnell, Response, Helen Rothschild Ewald and David L. Wallace

    doi:10.58680/ccc19958746
  3. I Came to Believe: Ethnography, Anonymity, and the Private I: Response
    doi:10.2307/358434

May 1994

  1. What's Wrong with Ethnography?
    Abstract

    This stimulating and refreshing study, written by one of the leading commentators in the field, provides novel answers to these crucial questions. What's Wrong With Ethnography provides a fresh look at the rationale for and distinctiveness of ethnographic research in sociology, education and related fields, and succeeds in slaying a number of currently fashionable sacred cows. Relativism, critical theory, the uniqueness of the case study and the distinction between qualitative and quantitative research are all examined and found wanting as a basis for informed ethnography. The policy and political implications of ethnography are a particular focus of attention. The author compels the reader to reexamine some basic methodological assumptions in an exciting way, Martin Bulmer, London School of Economics.

    doi:10.2307/359023

February 1992

  1. On Blocking and Unblocking Sonja: A Case Study in Two Voices
    Abstract

    Preview this article: On Blocking and Unblocking Sonja: A Case Study in Two Voices, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/ccc/43/1/collegecompositionandcommunication8895-1.gif

    doi:10.58680/ccc19928895

February 1989

  1. Ethnography in the Writing Classroom
    doi:10.2307/358183

May 1985

  1. Articles from the "California Divorce Project": A Case Study of the Concept of Audience
    doi:10.2307/357435
  2. Articles from the “California Divorce Project”: A Case Study of the Concept of Audience
    doi:10.58680/ccc198511764