Susan Miller-Cochran

6 articles · 2 books

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Who Reads Miller-Cochran

Susan Miller-Cochran's work travels primarily in Digital & Multimodal (50% of indexed citations) · 6 total indexed citations from 3 clusters.

By cluster

  • Digital & Multimodal — 3
  • Composition & Writing Studies — 2
  • Rhetoric — 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. “Why Am I Here?”: Exploring Graduate Students’ Academic Writing Anxieties and the Potential for Contemplative and Mindfulness-Based Teaching Practices
    Abstract

    Mental health challenges, notably anxiety, disproportionately affect graduate students, with research indicating a 41% prevalence rate compared to the general population (Evans et al.). Academic writing anxiety (AWA) stands out among these concerns, correlating with lower grades, self-esteem, and self-efficacy (Martinez et al.; Daly and Wilson; Goodman and Cirka). Traditionally, AWA has been viewed through a cognitive lens, neglecting its complexity. To address this, we conducted a comprehensive survey gathering both quantitative and qualitative data on graduate students’ AWA experiences. Our analysis of student narratives unveils how academic cultures alienate marginalized students, fostering impostor syndrome and AWA. We advocate for integrating mindfulness-based and contemplative pedagogies within feminist and anti-racist frameworks (Mathieu and Muir; Inoue; Graphenreed and Poe) to catalyze transformative change amid this pressing historical moment.

  2. From the Guest Editors: Advocating for Writing and Well-Being
  3. Cultivating Change from the Ground Up: Developing a Grassroots Programmatic Assessment
    Abstract

    To address the needs and interests of primary stakeholders in a writing program, this article presents a model of “grassroots” assessment that involves instructors from all ranks as well as students in the development, facilitation, and interpretation of assessment results. The authors describe two assessment plans that measured student and instructor perceptions about curricular changes, the individual results of those assessments, and the conclusions the authors came to about the importance and challenges of involving a range of stakeholders in assessment.

  4. Making Peace with the Rising Costs of Writing Technologies: Flexible Classroom Design as a Sustainable Solution
    doi:10.1016/j.compcom.2012.12.002
  5. Beyond “ESL Writing”: Teaching Cross-Cultural Composition at a Community College
    Abstract

    This article describes the design and implementation of a cross-cultural composition coursewhich was designed to provide opportunities for ESL students and native English-speaking students to learn about cross-cultural literacy practices from each other in a first-year writing context at a community college in the Southwest.

    doi:10.58680/tetyc201220838
  6. DIY Mentoring: Developing Personal Learning Networks

Books in Pinakes (2)