Ryan P. Weber

3 articles

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Who Reads Weber

Ryan P. Weber's work travels primarily in Technical Communication (34% of indexed citations) · 46 total indexed citations from 6 clusters.

By cluster

  • Technical Communication — 16
  • Rhetoric — 10
  • Digital & Multimodal — 7
  • Other / unclustered — 5
  • Community Literacy — 4
  • Composition & Writing Studies — 4

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. Writing Entrepreneurs: A Survey of Attitudes, Habits, Skills, and Genres
    Abstract

    This article presents data from an electronic survey asking 101 entrepreneurs in Wisconsin and North Alabama about the documents they write before opening and while operating their businesses, the writing skills they value, and the audiences they consider when writing. The results demonstrate that entrepreneurs highly value writing and rhetorical skills, produce a huge range of documents, and require distinctive genres at different stages of their ventures. The results can help professional communication instructors, entrepreneurship and small-business consultants, and aspiring entrepreneurs to more effectively anticipate and meet the rhetorical challenges of opening and operating a business.

    doi:10.1177/1050651915588145
  2. Ecological, Pedagogical, Public Rhetoric
    Abstract

    Public rhetoric pedagogy can benefit from an ecological perspective that sees change as advocated not through a single document but through multiple mundane and monumental texts. This article summarizes various approaches to rhetorical ecology, offers an ecological read of the Montgomery bus boycotts, and concludes with pedagogical insights on a first-year composition project emphasizing rhetorical ecologies.

    doi:10.58680/ccc201118389
  3. Productive Mess: First-Year Composition Takes the University's Agonism Online
    Abstract

    This webtext describes a pilot course that united four first-year composition courses around shared readings and online discussion addressing the physical and virtual university. The goal of the pilot was to foster previously impossible student interactions by exploring how discrete discussion roles shaped interaction and reputations among students.Ultimately, we wanted to provide a structured environment that facilitated independent student investigation and exchange. We hope that this research testifies to the fact that forums are not naturally pedagogically sound; rather, fostering meaningful digital encounters requires careful and thoughtful pedaogical planning.