Robert M. Brown

7 articles
The University of Texas at Austin
  1. Self-Composed
    Abstract

    The personal statement written for graduate school admission has been a genre virtually ignored by rhetoricians but one that deserves attention. Not only a document of pragmatic importance for applicants, the personal statement is an indicator of disciplinary socialization. The discipline studied here is clinical psychology. Combining quantitative and qualitative methods, the author analyzed a corpus of statements to identify features distinguishing statements of admitted applicants from those of rejected applicants. The findings showed that successful applicants attended more to projecting their future research endeavors and demonstrating their commitments to scientific epistemology. Thus, the author argues that the modifier personal needs qualification, because successful applicants tend to emphasize their public identities as apprentice scientists.

    doi:10.1177/0741088304264338
  2. Guest editors’ column
    doi:10.1080/10572259909364644
  3. Regarding "The Snow Man": Some Comments for S. J. Keyser
    doi:10.2307/376508
  4. Comment & Response
    doi:10.58680/ce197716477
  5. The Typology of Literary Signs
    doi:10.58680/ce197118807
  6. Response to Edward P. I. Corbett, "The Rhetoric of the Open Hand and the Rhetoric of the Closed Fist"
    doi:10.2307/356560
  7. In Defense of Esme
    doi:10.2307/373504