Aurora Matzke

4 articles · 1 book
Miami University

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Who Reads Matzke

Aurora Matzke's work travels primarily in Digital & Multimodal (58% of indexed citations) · 12 total indexed citations from 4 clusters.

By cluster

  • Digital & Multimodal — 7
  • Technical Communication — 3
  • Other / unclustered — 1
  • Composition & Writing Studies — 1

Counts include only citations from indexed journals that deposit reference lists with CrossRef. Authors whose readers publish primarily in venues without reference deposits will appear less central than they are. See coverage notes →

  1. Review: Unwell Writing Centers: Searching for Wellness in Neoliberal Educational Institutions and Beyond
    Abstract

    “Unwell Writing Centers: Searching for Wellness in Neoliberal Educational Institutions and Beyond” blends narrative, mixed methods research, and rhetorical analysis to make a case for the possibilities inherent in homegrown wellness practices that are “communal, political, and rooted in defiance of white supremacy.”

    doi:10.7771/2832-9414.2033
  2. Re-Inventing Digital Delivery for Multimodal Composing: A Theory and Heuristic for Composition Pedagogy
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2013.10.004
  3. Peer Reviewing Across the Atlantic: Patterns and Trends in L1 and L2 Comments Made in an Asynchronous Online Collaborative Learning Exchange Between Technical Communication Students in Sweden and in the United States
    Abstract

    In a globally networked learning environment (GNLE), 16 students at a university in Sweden and 17 students at a university in the United States exchanged peer-review comments on drafts of assignments they prepared in English for their technical communication classes. The instructors of both sets of students had assigned the same projects and taught their courses in the same way that they had in the previous year, which contrasts with the common practice of having students in partnering courses work on the same assignment or on linked assignments created specifically for the GNLE. The authors coded the students’ 816 comments according to their focus and orientation in order to investigate the possible differences between the comments made by the L2 students in Sweden and those made by the L1 (English as a second language) students in the United States, the possible impact of peer reviewing online, and the influence of the instructors’ directions on the students’ peer-reviewing behavior.

    doi:10.1177/1050651910363270
  4. doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2008.01.003

Books in Pinakes (1)