Author |
: Laura Gray-Rosendale |
Publisher |
: SUNY Press |
Total Pages |
: 308 |
Release |
: 2018-01-29 |
ISBN-10 |
: 9781438468976 |
ISBN-13 |
: 1438468970 |
Rating |
: 4/5 (76 Downloads) |
Book Synopsis Getting Personal by : Laura Gray-Rosendale
Download or read book Getting Personal written by Laura Gray-Rosendale and published by SUNY Press. This book was released on 2018-01-29 with total page 308 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Addresses how digital forms of personal writing can be most effectively used by teachers, students, and other community members. At a time when Twitter, Facebook, blogs, Instagram, and other social media dominate our interactions with one another and with our world, the teaching of writing also necessarily involves the employment of multimodal approaches, visual literacies, and online learning. Given this new digital landscape, how do we most effectively teach and create various forms of personal writing within our rhetoric and composition classes, our creative writing classes, and our community groups? Contributors to Getting Personal offer their thoughts about some of the positives and negatives of teaching and using personal writing within digital contexts. They also reveal intriguing teaching activities that they have designed to engage their students and other writers. In addition, they share some of the innovative responses they have received to these assignments. Getting Personal is about finding ways to teach and use personal writing in the digital age that can truly empower writing teachers, writing students, as well as other community members. Getting Personal offers an engaging, comprehensive view of how and why instructors, in both creative and academic writing, can integrate contemporary writing and communication practices into their classrooms, assignments, and curricula. Jill Talbot, editor of Metawritings: Toward a Theory of Nonfiction I am right now rethinking some of my assumptions about what it means to do and to teach personal writingespecially in digital environments. Im also taken with the fact that while the chapters are clearly academic, they are also personal, and while several of them explicitly call the false binary between the personal and the academic into question, my sense is that they themselves do so implicitly as well. Barry M. Maid, coauthor of The McGraw-Hill Guide: Writing for College, Writing for Life, Fourth Edition