Kathryn Rosser Raign

4 articles
University of North Texas
  1. Decentering the History of the Writing Center: A Case for the Mesopotamian Edubba as an Early Writing Center
    Abstract

    This paper tells the story of theedubba, the Mesopotamian scribal school. First, theedubba’s pedagogy demonstrates that the first formalized center for teaching writing was more akin to the modern writing center than to the composition classroom. Second, unlike many modern writing centers, theedubbawas multilingual. It is easy to look at the past and congratulate ourselves on how much better we’ve made the future, but theedubbahas something to teach us beyond the fact that it preceded the composition classroom. A circle has no beginning, and both the writing center and the writing classroom are part of one circle—equally important to the students they serve.

    doi:10.58680/ccc2023752418
  2. The Art of Ancient Mesopotamian Technical Manuals and Letters: The Origins of Instructional Writing
    Abstract

    The people of the Ancient Near East, inventors of writing, fully understood that providing instructions was a highly persuasive and reader-centric act that required the writer to make specific choices – the same choices that we still make today. In fact, when we write instructions and teach others to write instructions, we are practicing principles developed by the Mesopotamians. In this paper, I analyze excerpts from a technical manual and two letters to make my argument.

    doi:10.1080/10572252.2021.1915386
  3. Raign and Sims respond
    doi:10.1080/10572259509364605
  4. Gender, persuasion techniques, and collaboration
    Abstract

    This essay reports on the relationship between persuasion techniques used by collaborators and possible gender influences. To examine this relationship, the authors observed four proposal developers (two males and two females) as they collaborated with several groups at Southwestern Bell Telephone company. The authors examined preconceptions about three factors: effective and ineffective collaboration, gender's effect on collaboration, and gender's effect on persuasion. They also examined persuasion techniques used by the proposal developers.

    doi:10.1080/10572259309364526