Teaching English in the Two-Year College
1513 articlesMarch 2024
December 2023
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Redesigning America’s Community Colleges: How Guided Pathways Has Promoted Workforce Training and Devalued the Humanities ↗
Abstract
In minimizing and narrowing students’ opportunities for exploration, discovery, deliberation, and thoughtfulness—the educational gold standard of our nation’s most elite educational institutions—by offering them a rationed education that is designed to facilitate quick completion of a degree or certificate, “redesigning” and Guided Pathways reforms and recommendations have promoted “workforce training” and devalued the humanities.
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We are now a decade into the call for comprehensive community college “redesign” known as Guided Pathways. This introduction provides an overview of the Guided Pathways model and its advocacy arm and reviews critiques of the model in education research and two-year college literacy studies. These reviews contextualize the contents of the special issue.
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This article critiques the whole-college reform project dubbed Guided Pathways. The article describes how Guided Pathways research has failed to provide data that support the reform project’s claims, disputes the extent to which Guided Pathways can claim to be equity-oriented work, and ultimately identifies Guided Pathways as a reform project that diverges from the interests of the two-year college.
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Preview this article: Review: Engaging Faculty in Guided Pathways: A Practical Resource for College Leaders, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/tetyc/51/2/teachingenglishinthetwo-yearcollege512180-1.gif
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In this symposium, seven community college transfer students present their perspectives on Guided Pathways curricular reforms. Drawing on published scholarship and policy documents as well as their own lived experiences, they identify positive aspects of the Guided Pathways model as well as shortcomings in its conceptualization and local implementation.
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This essay conducts critical discourse analysis of website landing pages for community college English departments that have explicitly adopted Guided Pathways reforms. The analysis examines how the social practice of teaching English is recontextualized through discourse.
September 2023
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Editor’s Introduction: One Does Not Simply Teach in Mordor: Literacy Studies and the Triumph of Neoliberal Ideology ↗
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Preview this article: Editor’s Introduction: One Does Not Simply Teach in Mordor: Literacy Studies and the Triumph of Neoliberal Ideology, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/tetyc/51/1/teachingenglishinthetwo-yearcollege32712-1.gif
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This is a lightly edited version of the TYCA Chair’s Address delivered at the 2023 National TYCA Conference in Chicago, Illinois.
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Review: Materiality and Writing Studies: Aligning Labor, Scholarship, and Teaching by Holly Hassel and Cassandra Phillips ↗
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Preview this article: Review: Materiality and Writing Studies: Aligning Labor, Scholarship, and Teaching by Holly Hassel and Cassandra Phillips, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/tetyc/51/1/teachingenglishinthetwo-yearcollege32720-1.gif
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In this article, we share strategies and data from a study constructed in a faculty learning community using course analytics to design, deliver, and track instructor-student communication—in the form of “nudges”—to improve student success. Although we do not feel comfortable making generalized conclusions from such a small sample, we think our data suggests that many students positively benefited from grade-based nudging. We also think it was extremely important that our nudging interventions focused on all students within the class, not only those who were not doing well. However, we acknowledge that the majority of the instructors said this type of work takes time.
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This is a lightly edited version of the Conference Chair’s Address delivered at the 2023 TYCA National Conference, held on February 15 in Chicago, Illinois.
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Review: Critical Rural Pedagogy: Connecting College Students with American Literature by Sharon Mitchler ↗
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Preview this article: Review: Critical Rural Pedagogy: Connecting College Students with American Literature by Sharon Mitchler, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/tetyc/51/1/teachingenglishinthetwo-yearcollege32719-1.gif
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Feature: “Be careful of what you’re holding with students’ hearts”: Native American Community College Students’ Perceptions of Self-Disclosure in Writing Assignments ↗
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This critical phenomenological study sought Native American student perspectives on intention and desired faculty response following self-disclosure of personal challenges in college writing assignments and discusses implications for faculty and for implementing trauma-informed writing pedagogy with students who are historically marginalized.
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Students entering first-year composition often discover self-inquiry for the first time, enabling them to examine their identities when opportunities are created to do so. The experiences of two traditional first-year college students are examined to better understand the power that writing instructors and writing courses hold.
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Instructional Note: Seeing All Students as Writers: Video-Based Discussion Board Strategies for Remote Classrooms ↗
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This article presents a video discussion board assignment designed to foster belonging and academic language practice in a remote classroom. We consider how the assignment supported robust discussion and multimodal composition in Critical Reading and Writing, a course run with synchronous and asynchronous components during the COVID-19 pandemic at a technical college.
May 2023
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Review: Teaching Writing in the Twenty-First Century: by Beth L. Hewett, Tiffany Bourelle, and Scott Warnock; Administering Writing Programs in the Twenty-First Century: by Tiffany Bourelle, Beth L. Hewett, and Scott Warnock. ↗
Abstract
Preview this article: Review: Teaching Writing in the Twenty-First Century: by Beth L. Hewett, Tiffany Bourelle, and Scott Warnock; Administering Writing Programs in the Twenty-First Century: by Tiffany Bourelle, Beth L. Hewett, and Scott Warnock., Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/tetyc/50/4/teachingenglishinthetwo-yearcollege32591-1.gif
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This roundtable discussion addresses issues of professionalism and disciplinarity at TYCs and constructs a vision of the TYC as the future hub of writing studies.
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Review: Working with and against Shared Curricula: Perspectives from College Writing Teachers and Administrators Edited by Connie Kendall Theado and Samantha NeCamp. ↗
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Preview this article: Review: Working with and against Shared Curricula: Perspectives from College Writing Teachers and Administrators Edited by Connie Kendall Theado and Samantha NeCamp., Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/tetyc/50/4/teachingenglishinthetwo-yearcollege32590-1.gif
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This essay explores affordances and limitations of the disciplinary labels that two-year college teachers use to frame our work. Ultimately, it argues that the termliteracy studiesbest reflects the transdisciplinary work we do.
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This article traces the complexities of two-year college (TYC) writing program administration and offers suggestions for more research about TYC writing program administration and in collaboration with TYC writing program administrators.
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In this symposium, five editors ofTeaching English in the Two-Year College(TETYC) discuss the past, present, and future of the journal and the profession.
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Preview this article: From the Archive: The Genesis and Early Development of TETYC: A Silver Anniversary Reminiscence, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/tetyc/50/4/teachingenglishinthetwo-yearcollege32585-1.gif
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Published scholarship on two-year college writing programs began in 1990; has developed through two identifiable stages, from descriptive to prescriptive; and is on the cusp of entering a third stage, the ethical, in which we must know and account for the potentially harmful effects of our writing programs.
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Editor’s Introduction: Refusing Pessimism: Imagining a Future for Two-Year College Literacy Studies as a Discipline and a Profession ↗
Abstract
Preview this article: Editor’s Introduction: Refusing Pessimism: Imagining a Future for Two-Year College Literacy Studies as a Discipline and a Profession, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/tetyc/50/4/teachingenglishinthetwo-yearcollege32583-1.gif
March 2023
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Editor’s Intoduction: The Community College as an Institution of the Anthropocene: The Great Acceleration and Literacy Studies ↗
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Preview this article: Editor's Intoduction: The Community College as an Institution of the Anthropocene: The Great Acceleration and Literacy Studies, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/tetyc/50/3/teachingenglishinthetwoyearcollege32507-1.gif
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Feature: Developmental Writing Reform at Onondaga Community College: From Corequisite to IRW, Eliminating Dev Ed while Supporting All Students ↗
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This article explores how we eliminated—without lowering student success rates—our developmental writing and reading courses (three to seven noncredit hours) and shifted to an all-inclusive, no-placement-necessary, integrated reading and writing course for first-year comp.
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Preview this article: Reviews: Writing Placement in Two-Year Colleges:The Pursuit of Equity in Postsecondary Education, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/tetyc/50/3/teachingenglishinthetwoyearcollege32514-1.gif
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Feature: First-Year in the Two-Year: Preliminary Results from a Study of New Two-Year College Teacher Transitions ↗
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This article offers preliminary findings from a research study tracing the transitions of eight instructors in their first year of teaching English at two-year colleges. We report findings related to preparation, position responsibilities, and mentoring.
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Today, the developmental education landscape is as complex, as contentious, and as politically fraught as it has ever been. In this essay, we seek to provide busy two-year college English teachers with a degree of clarity about the present moment in developmental education reform. This essay offers support for individuals seeking to enact corequisite reform on their campuses while also recognizing this work involves a great many variables, including state mandates, local student demographics, and local institutional histories and current circumstances.
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Contributors to this symposium, current and former two-year college teacher-scholar-activists, reflect upon bell hooks’s legacy share the lessons they have learned from her work, and consider how hooks’s teachings might inform our praxis and move us forward as a profession.
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Preview this article: Review: The Hidden Inequities in Labor-BasedContract Grading, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/tetyc/50/3/teachingenglishinthetwoyearcollege32515-1.gif
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This Instructional Note elaborates on a definition of a decolonized classroom as one that champions Indigenous epistemologies, connects students to community events and organizations beyond the college, and unsettles dominant perceptions of a college education as strictly for capitalistic advancement.
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This article offers preliminary findings from a research study tracing the transitions of eight instructors in their first year of teaching English at two-year colleges. We report findings related to preparation, position responsibilities, and mentoring.
December 2022
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Instructional Note: “It’s important to dance with the text”: Enhancing Writing Instruction through Reading Apprenticeship ↗
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This article explores the Reading Apprenticeship framework as a support for instructors to orchestrate dynamic, contextualized literacy instruction that supports both student engagement and deeper learning about the discipline of writing studies.
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Feature: Teaching Reading as Raciolinguistic Justice: (Re)Centering Reading Strategies for Antiracist Reading ↗
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Antiracist education practices have gained increasing attention. Oftentimes, however, descriptions of this work fail to explicate the role of reading skills in students’ critical engagement with diverse texts. I explore the potential of metacognitive reading strategy instruction as a form of foundational literacy skills development for engaging in antiracist reading. Drawing from my experiences as a female of color and a coordinator and instructor of integrated reading and writing, I expand upon the concept of raciolinguistically just reading instruction, describing how students can document their application of multiple foundational reading strategies through the meta-strategy of annotation and other metacognitive practices. In particular, I focus on how students’ annotations can reflect their work in making text-based connections. Such annotation practice enacts a culturally sustaining pedagogy that amplifies student voices and their role as knowledge producers. I conclude by considering the larger role of decentering the instructor to foster students’ antiracist reading.
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Although a good deal of writing has been done about reading, many articles, both in professional journals and in public media, bemoan a lack of reading skills. There is often a discourse around what students can’t do. In this article, we argue that adapting an assetbased, experiential framework around reading could be one of the most foundational and crucial steps in transforming our structures to respect, and therefore retain and engage, returning students.
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Guest Editors’ Introduction: The Changing Realities of Open-Access Reading: Where Are We Now? Where Might We Go Next? ↗
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Preview this article: Guest Editors’ Introduction: The Changing Realities of Open-Access Reading: Where Are We Now? Where Might We Go Next?, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/tetyc/50/2/teachingenglishinthetwo-yearcollege32295-1.gif
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Feature: Teaching toward Reading Transfer in Open-Access Contexts: Framing Strategic Reading as a Transferable Skill ↗
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This article synthesizes the literature on writing transfer and findings from several key studies of reading in two-year colleges to outline a set of pedagogical practices that instructors can use to promote reading transfer through explicit attention to “strategic reading.”
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Preview this article: Review: Skim, Dive, Surface: Teaching Digital Reading, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/tetyc/50/2/teachingenglishinthetwo-yearcollege32300-1.gif
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Preview this article: Review: Rethinking Reading in College: An Across-the-Curriculum Approach, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/tetyc/50/2/teachingenglishinthetwo-yearcollege32301-1.gif
September 2022
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Review: Rhetorics of Overcoming: Rewriting Narratives of Disability and Accessibility in Writing Studies ↗
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Preview this article: Review: Rhetorics of Overcoming: Rewriting Narratives of Disability and Accessibility in Writing Studies, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/tetyc/50/1/teachingenglishinthetwo-yearcollege32197-1.gif