In this singular study, David R. Russell provides a history of writing instruction outside general composition courses in American secondary and higher education, from the founding of public secondary schools and research universities in the 1870s through the spread of the writing-across-the-curriculum movement in the 1980s.
Russell's task is to examine the ways writing was taught in the myriad curricula that composed the varied structure of secondary and higher education in modern America. He begins with the assertion that, before the 1870s, writing was taught as ancillary to speaking. As a result, formal writing instruction was essentially training in handwriting, the mechanical process of transcribing sound to visual form.From this point, Russell carefully examines academic writing, its origins and its teaching, from a broad institutional perspective. He looks at the history of little-studied genres of student writing such as the research paper, lab report, and essay examination. Tracing the effects of increasing specialization on writing instruction, he notes how two new ideals of academic life, research and utilitarian service, shaped writing instruction into its modern forms. Finally, he contributes the definitive history of the current writing-across-the-curriculum movement, providing a study of the long tradition of other WAC efforts with an analysis of why they have waned.''Making a Place for the Poetic in Academic Writing. ... ''(Un)Authorized Discourse: Performing in Lesbian: Writing/Lesbian: Theory. ... Russell, David R. Writing in the Academic Disciplines, 1870–1990: A Curricular History.
Russell, D. (1991) Writing in the Academic Disciplines, 1870–1990: A Curricular History, Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press. Russell, D., Lea, M., Parker, J., Street, B. and Donahue, T. (2009) “Exploring Notions of Genre in ...
and Writing in the Academic Disciplines, 1870–1990: A Curricular History (1991) by David R. Russell. John C. Brereton's collection of primary sources, The Origin of Composition Studies in the American College, 1875–1925: A Documentary ...
Susan Peck MacDonald. Rowan, Katherine E. “A Contemporary Theory of Explanatory Writing.” Written Communication 5 (1988): 23-56. Russell, David. Writing in the Academic Disciplines, 1870-1990: A Curricular History. Carbondale: Southern ...
... A Teacher's Introduction to the Rhetorical Tradition . In The Practice of Theory : Teacher Research in Com- position ... Deconstruction , Timothy W. Crusius's A Teacher's Introduction to Philosoph- ical Hermeneutics , Richard Beach's A ...
“What Are the Stakes of This Controversy for the Discipline?” Critical Choices for the Future of First-Year Writing: Part Two. Conf. on Coll. ... Writing in the Academic Disciplines, 1870–1990: A Curricular History.
Second, writers recontextualize when they modify text semantically and syntactically through expression verification (Cameron et al., 1996). Students demonstrate expression verification when they revise their text in response to ...
This volume will reveal to scholars and researchers a range of possibilities for the study of disciplinary discourse and its teaching, and suggest to them new prospects for the future -- and for the better.
[Reflections on how to learn academic writing]. In E. M. Jakobs & D. Knorr (Eds.), Schreiben in den Wissenschaften [Writing in the sciences] (pp. 125–139). ... Writing in the academic disciplines, 1870–1990: A curricular history.
Women Teaching and Writing in the Progressive Era Lisa Mastrangelo ... David R. Russell, in Writing in the Academic Disciplines, 1870–1990, cites an excellent example of a student writing for English C. Russell notes that senior Ralph ...