Michael J. Faris

24 articles · 3 books

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Who Reads Faris

Michael J. Faris's work travels primarily in Technical Communication (60% of indexed citations) · 5 total indexed citations from 2 clusters.

By cluster

  • Technical Communication — 3
  • Digital & Multimodal — 2

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. Logging On
  2. Logging On
  3. Ecologies, bodies, and OWI teacher preparation: reflecting on a practicum for graduate instructors teaching writing online
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2024.102881
  4. Logging On
  5. Logging On
  6. Logging On
  7. Teaching Professional and Technical Communication: A Practicum in a Book: edited by T. Bridgeford, Logan, UT, Utah State University Press, 2018, 247 pp., $30.95 print, $25.95 (ebook), ISBN: 9781607326793
    doi:10.1080/10572252.2022.2130670
  8. Logging On: Spring 2023
  9. Soundwriting Pedagogies: A Mixtape
  10. In This Issue
  11. For Lisa: A Patchwork Quilt
  12. In This Issue
  13. Queer Kinesthetic Interlistening
  14. Soundwriting Pedagogies
    Abstract

    Soundwriting Pedagogies argues that sound is an undervalued mode of writing instruction. It offers practical strategies, creative applications, insightful theories, soundings out, and lots of examples to encourage the use and value of soundwriting in composition, writing, rhetoric, and communication classrooms. Throughout this collection, contributors draw on the affordances of sound to theorize and share practices, so that they (and readers) can make sense in ways that might not work in traditional, alphabetic written prose. Crank it up.

  15. Audio-Only Playlist Version of the Book
  16. A Multisensory Literacy Approach to Biomedical Healthcare Technologies: Aural, Tactile, and Visual Layered Health Literacies
    Abstract

    Health literacy is an embodied, multisensory experience that is invariably mediated by healthcare technologies. We illustrate this concept through three case studies that describe scenarios in which non-experts and lay experts engage in non-discursive literacy practices: parents caring for an infant in a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), people with type 1 diabetes (T1D) self-managing their treatment, and public audiences reporting symptoms to a crowd-sourced flu-tracking program.

  17. Building Rhetoric One Bit at a Time: A Case of Maker Rhetoric with littleBits
    Abstract

    In this webtext, we share our experiences in a new media graduate course in which students played and experimented with littleBits (modular circuitry designed for easy invention). Modular three-dimensional objects provide opportunities to introduce new media to students in ways that disrupt their conventional practices of invention, provide opportunities to explore rhetorical practice as play, and refigure creation as remix and craft.

  18. Remediating the CCCC Chair's Address for Video
    Abstract

    This webtext shares the invention practices and processes of two students in Michael Faris's 2016 two-week New Media Rhetoric graduate course, Sarah E. Austin and Erica M. Stone, who were tasked with creating a video of Joyce Locke Carter's 2016 College on Composition and Communication (CCCC) Chair's Address.

  19. Book Review: Vulnerability in Technological Cultures: New Directions in Research and Governance
    doi:10.1177/1050651916685479
  20. Emerging scholars and social media use: a pilot study of risk
    Abstract

    The ubiquity of social media for professional and personal purposes has proven both an asset to scholars in writing studies (broadly conceived) and, in some cases, a cause for concern. Recent news events suggest that institutional decision-making surrounding social media is reactionary, severe, and steeped in discussions of "risky behaviors." These events (and others) result in anxiety surrounding social media use among individuals and organizations. In this article, we respond to these concerns with an empirical, mixed methods pilot study that investigates the ways new and emergent scholars might mitigate potential problems associated with social media use. The article presents preliminary findings that destabilize rule-based approaches and introduce uncertainties and vulnerabilities that accompany social media use.

    doi:10.1145/3068698.3068703
  21. Vignette: Coffee Shop Writing in a Networked Age
    Abstract

    Preview this article: Vignette: Coffee Shop Writing in a Networked Age, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/ccc/66/1/collegecompositionandcommunication26102-1.gif

    doi:10.58680/ccc201426102
  22. iPads in the Technical Communication Classroom: An Empirical Study of Technology Integration and Use
    Abstract

    Integrating and using technology in the technical communication classroom is an ongoing interest and challenge for the field. Previous work tends to focus on best practices and other types of generalized advice, all of which are invaluable to teachers. But this article encourages teachers to also pay attention to sociotechnical forces and dynamics in local settings. It explains how a cartography of affect can be useful in demonstrating how technologies become imbued with meaning and significance in particular pedagog-ical contexts. The authors illustrate the value of this mapping practice through a case study of iPad integration and use in a technical communication service course and its teacher-training course. They also provide examples of heuristic questions that can guide critical cartography projects in local settings.

    doi:10.1177/1050651913490942
  23. E-Book Issues in Composition: A Partial Assessment and Perspective for Teachers
    Abstract

    E-book devices (and devices that support e-books) are increasingly being integrated into the working lives of students and teachers. We discuss our pedagogical and institutional experiences with the Sony Reader in composition courses at both the graduate and undergraduate level, reporting on dynamics and challenges associated with three key literacy tasks: accessing texts, operating texts, and marking texts. We conclude with a heuristic that can help teachers and administrators adopt and design an e-book initiative.

  24. A Review of: Identity's Strategy: Rhetorical Selves in Conversion, by Dana Anderson: Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 2007. 209 + xi pp
    Abstract

    Identity, as a term and category of investigation, has come under critique in various theoretical circles, and thus has become almost a taboo topic in scholarship: it is seen as an ontological myst...

    doi:10.1080/02773941003617699

Books in Pinakes (3)