Matthew Davis

10 articles

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Who Reads Davis

Matthew Davis's work travels primarily in Composition & Writing Studies (82% of indexed citations) · 17 total indexed citations from 3 clusters.

By cluster

  • Composition & Writing Studies — 14
  • Digital & Multimodal — 2
  • Other / unclustered — 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. Editors’ Introduction: A Reflective Report, of Sorts
    doi:10.58680/ccc2026773400
  2. Editors’ Introduction: On Change, Memory, and Knowledge
    doi:10.58680/ccc2025772228
  3. Editors’ Introduction: A Dappled, Undisciplined Response to Generative AI
    doi:10.58680/ccc20257714
  4. Editors’ Introduction: Gatekeeping, Complexity, and Connection
    doi:10.58680/ccc2025764484
  5. Editors’ Introduction: A Usable Past to Re/Imagine the Future
    doi:10.58680/ccc2025763360
  6. Readiness to Learn: Variations in How Students Engage with the Teaching for Transfer Curriculum
    Abstract

    This article outlines the concept of readiness to learn (RTL) as a framework for explaining students’ differentiated engagement with the Teaching for Transfer (TFT) curriculum. As documented in student voices, RTL operates along a continuum ranging from preparing to engage, on one end, to enacting TFT, on the other, with beginning to engage in the middle.

    doi:10.58680/ccc2023752248
  7. Ways of Knowing and Doing
    Abstract

    A synthesis of converging and contrasting perspectives on ways of knowing and doing in digital rhetoric pedagogy among 25 teacher-scholars that provides a rough sketch of the state of digital rhetoric pedagogy as it is understood and practiced in the second decade of the 21st century and as it is told by a range of voices, including leading voices, in the subfield of Digital Rhetoric and identifies and highlights areas of productive tension among interviewees’ responses.

  8. The Teaching for Transfer Curriculum: The Role of Concurrent Transfer and Inside-and Outside-School Contexts in Supporting Students’ Writing Development
    Abstract

    Drawing on the Teaching for Transfer (TFT) writing curriculum, this study documents how students in writing courses at four different institutions transferred writing knowledge and practice concurrently into other sites of writing, including other courses, co-curriculars, and workplaces. This research demonstrates that when students, supported by the TFT curriculum, understood that appropriate transfer of writing knowledge and practice is both possible and desirable, (1) they engaged in writing transfer during the TFT course into other sites of writing; (2) they transferred from in-school contexts into out-of-school contexts with facility; and (3) in both cases, they engaged in a just-in-time transfer.

    doi:10.58680/ccc201930423
  9. Writing across college: Key Terms and Multiple Contexts as Factors Promoting Students' Transfer of Writing Knowledge and Practice
    doi:10.37514/wac-j.2018.29.1.02
  10. Notes Toward the Role of Materiality in Composing, Reviewing, and Assessing Multimodal Texts
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2014.01.001