Your Voice in Mine
Digital Writing
How can I hear my own voice unless it bounces off of yours? I have had that single line in my mind for years. It isn’t particularly poetic, and I don’t
4 min read
Pedagogical Training via Relationship Building: The Value of Peer Mentoring
Academic Labor
Graduate students enter graduate programs hungry to learn about research, teaching, and professionalization. They seek knowledge of their discipline, socialization from faculty and peers, and most importantly the tools to perform the jobs
8 min read
On the Horrors and Pleasures of Counting Words
Digital Writing
Good writing is not reducible to numbers; the word count for the expression of an idea can’t always (or even usually) be determined in advance. Ideas fit all kinds of containers, some
Blogging is a Choral Act
Digital Writing
I was going to start by saying that digital writing was, for me, a Pandora’s Box. But that would not be fair, or true. The jar Pandora opened held the evils of
Creative Beasts with Crayons
Digital Writing
Digital writing is emergent writing. It mutinies at the imposition of form, the edicts of the grammars of old. It rails to change the rules. It raises the flag of anarchy. The council
Creativity and the Power of Two
Collaboration
Running into each other on the Columbia University campus, we often chatted about books, teaching and learning, music, plants, Broadway shows, and our theories about how new ideas happened. We shared what inspired
10 min read
Confessions of a Graduate Teacher (Once Lost, Now Found)
Academic Labor
This is a story about two hemispheres of graduate school: teaching and dissertating. It is a story about how those two parts sometimes cohere but are more often rendered in sharp relief. It’
“Hands-Off” Teaching: Facilitating Conversation as Pedagogy in Library Instruction
Critical Pedagogy
“Knowledge creation is a conversation.” — R. David Lankes “I celebrate teaching that enables transgressions — a movement against and beyond boundaries. It is that movement which makes education the practice of freedom.” — bell hooks
Confessions of a Self-Taught College Instructor: Embracing the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
Academic Labor
When I started graduate school and immediately became the instructor of record of a freshman composition course, I had a couple of advantages going for me. First, my parents were both educators, one
8 min read
(dis)Owning Tech: Ensuring Value and Agency at the Moment of Interface
Agency
Listen to this chapter here, or subscribe to the entire serialized audiobook [https://anchor.fm/hybrid-teaching].Education is big business. In the U.S., over 5% [http://hdr.undp.org/en/content/expenditure-education-public-gdp#
14 min read
“College Readiness” versus “Ready for College”
Higher Ed
We have lots of definitions of “college readiness”; here are the ACT’s definitions [http://www.act.org/standard/] as well as the Common Core’s in Language Arts [http://www.corestandards.org/
Giving Voice to Written Words
Digital Literacy
Writers should talk more. We write to make ourselves heard. We use writing to tell a story, contribute to conversations, add our voices to a chorus, raise the alarm against injustice, call for
Beyond Surface-Level Digital Pedagogy
critical digital pedagogy
In 2013–14, a remarkable 20.5% [http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d15/tables/dt15_318.20.asp](154,636) of all Master’s degrees were earned by students in the field
10 min read
Making and Breaking Domain of One’s Own: Rethinking the Web in Higher Ed
Digital Pedagogy
On Friday, 12 August 2016, Martha Burtis gave one of two closing keynotes at the Digital Pedagogy Lab Institute held at the University of Mary Washington. Below is the text of her talk;
16 min read