Amy Dayton

5 articles
  1. Digital Literacy in Rural Women’s Lives
    Abstract

    This qualitative study looks at how rural women in the American South have obtained access to digital technologies for reading and writing. Using the “life history” approach (Brandt; Hawisher and Selfe), we interviewed five women. We look at the challenges caused by the Digital Divide, at economies of access, including the financial factors that shape individuals’ uses of digital technologies for reading and writing, at the strategies that the women used for gaining access to needed technologies, and at the nature of sponsorship in digital, rural contexts.

    doi:10.25148/clj.9.2.009286
  2. Review: Expanding Borders and Forging New Paths: Perspectives on Writing Research
    Abstract

    Preview this article: Review: Expanding Borders and Forging New Paths: Perspectives on Writing Research, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/ce/76/1/collegeenglish24197-1.gif

    doi:10.58680/ce201324197
  3. <i>Who Owns School? Authority, Students, and Online Discourse</i>, Kelly Ritter
    Abstract

    Kelly Ritter's book, Who Owns School? Authority, Students, and Online Discourse, part of Hampton Press's New Dimensions in Computers and Composition Series, would at first glance appear to be writt...

    doi:10.1080/07350198.2012.630967
  4. “What the College Has Done for Me”: Anzia Yezierska and the Problem of Progressive Education
    Abstract

    The literary work of Anzia Yezierska is relevant to the fields of composition, rhetoric, and literacy. Partly in dialogue with the philosophy of John Dewey, it reveals the tensions and conflicts inherent in progressive education, emphasizing how these were viewed through the lens of the immigrant student. Yezierska shows that pedagogical progressivism has had tremendous potential to tap into students’ lived experiences and transform them into more fully realized, engaged citizens, even as she also shows that such power has been constrained by institutional structures.

    doi:10.58680/ce201218408
  5. Teaching English for “A Better America”
    Abstract

    Pedagogical materials from the early twentieth-century Americanization movement functioned rhetorically as responses to public discourse, which was highly critical of immigrants' language practices. In teachers' journals and language textbooks, educators engaged in a dialogue with the public, seeking to establish themselves as proponents of social progress and cultural stability. They framed English instruction as a tool for a refashioning of the nation and embraced monolingualism as a unifying force within that nation. As educators sought to engage native-born Americans and immigrants alike in the creation of this ideal nation, assumptions about national identity became embedded into pedagogical practices.

    doi:10.1080/07350190802339275