Elizabeth Brockman

2 articles
  1. Reflections on Twenty-Five Years of From the Classroom
    Abstract

    Abstract In Elizabeth Brockman's final “Editor's Introduction,” she reminisces about her twenty-four-year tenure as column editor of From the Classroom. The primary focus, however, is a celebration of Bev Hogue's “Ink, Blood, and Bones: Excavating History via Natasha Trethewey's ‘Native Guard,’ ” which is the final FTC manuscript she edited.

    doi:10.1215/15314200-11625234
  2. Taking Stock
    Abstract

    This article characterizes the first ten volume years of From the Classroom (FTC), one of three featured columns in Pedagogy. FTC articles, like other Pedagogy articles, showcase the work of scholars representing different ranks, subdisciplines, and institutional levels; unlike regular articles, FTC articles tend to be just 500 to 3,000 words. FTC authors, then, are challenged to raise a specific question or phenomenon by placing it momentarily within a larger theoretical, historical, and conceptual framework. Brockman groups most FTC articles into nine categories: Minding the Margins; Honoring Creative Nonfiction; Understanding Class, Culture, Gender, and Race; Mentoring Preservice Teachers; Incorporating Technology; Constructing Academic Arguments; Teaching Non-English Majors; Highlighting Effective Methods; and Showcasing Subdisciplines.

    doi:10.1215/15314200-2009-035