Joseph J. Comprone

6 articles
Affiliations: University of Louisville Hospital (2), Tottori University (1), University of Louisville (1)

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Joseph J. Comprone's work travels primarily in Digital & Multimodal (100% of indexed citations) · 1 indexed citations.

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  1. Where Do We Go Next in Writing across the Curriculum?
    Abstract

    Preview this article: Where Do We Go Next in Writing across the Curriculum?, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/ccc/44/1/collegecompositioncommunication8845-1.gif

    doi:10.58680/ccc19938845
  2. The Future of Doctoral Studies in English
    doi:10.2307/357555
  3. Composition/Rhetoric: A Synthesis
    doi:10.2307/357729
  4. Recent research in reading and its implications for the college composition curriculum
    Abstract

    Articles by Richard Fulkerson, Karen Pelz, and Michael Hogan in the first issue of the Journal of Advanced Composition (Spring 1980) all pointed to a serious lack of consistency in the profession's conception of what should be covered in advanced composition courses in college. Professor Pelz, while arguing against what she perceives as another teacher's advocacy of media-centered rather than writing-centered advanced composition courses, advocates the development of a personal style in advanced writing courses, seemingly calling for an emphasis on expressive discourse and self-discovery (A Reply to Medicott: Evaluating Writing, 7-9). Professor Fulkerson (Some Theoretical Speculations on the Advanced Composition Curriculum, 9-12) uses Abrams' and Kinneavy's theories of literary criticism and the aims of discourse to construct two different curricular models for advanced composition programs--one suggesting courses based on the skills required of students as they produce discourse with different aims, the other suggesting synthesizing all four discourse aims in a single advanced composition course. Finally, Professor Hogan (Advanced Composition: A Survey, 21-29) sent questionnaires to 374 advanced composition teachers at 311 schools and found an enormously diverse range of course objectives and plans among the responses that he received. Hogan also found that many advanced composition courses used the same books as freshman writing courses in the same schools. Although rhetoric, Hogan found, dominated the courses of instruction, there did not seem to be any clear or consistent pattern of rhetorical approach in the schools or teachers who reported. Very few respondents, in fact, reflected much attention to types or aims of discourse, as Fulkerson had suggested, in their assignments or plans. Articles such as these reflect the composition profession's general lack

    📍 University of Louisville Hospital
    doi:10.1080/07350198309359044
  5. Burke's Dramatism as a means of using literature to teach composition
    📍 University of Louisville Hospital
    doi:10.1080/02773947909390537
  6. Preparing the New Composition Teacher
    doi:10.2307/357236