REMINDER: Twelfth Annual CASDW-ACR Conference CFP

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Twelfth Annual CASDW-ACR Conference

Visions for Writing Studies

May 30 – June 1, 2020

London, Ontario

CALL FOR PROPOSALS PDF (Bilingual)

The Canadian Association for the Study of Discourse and Writing-l’Association Canadienne de rédactologie welcomes proposals for workshops and research presentations on any current topic/issue in the study and teaching of writing, communication, discourse, and language. We encourage interdisciplinary and inter-organizational collaborations.

This year’s Congress theme calls attention to divisions and exclusions across the academy. Divisions can be viewed in multiple ways in terms of:

  • fields, foci, and research methods;
  • institutional contexts and Canadian and international sites of scholarship;
  • the hierarchies in which administrators, tenured and untenured faculty, instructors, and students are caught up;
  • and access, accommodation, inclusion, and equity for scholars, students, professionals, and publics within communities of practice.

Like many disciplines, writing studies has a whiteness problem (Ratcliffe, 2005; Inoue, 2019), including its tacit approval of settler colonial practices of “white, language supremacy” (Inoue, p.16). Grappling with this problem must involve attending to the absences—or absent presences—in the demographics of writing studies’ conferences, special interest groups, teaching, hiring, and citation practices. Doing so can drive both important research about the ways writing reflects and addresses settler colonialism and racial inequality and the development of a more critical writing studies.

This year’s Congress call invites us to pay critical attention to important questions at the heart of writing studies.

  • What visions are there for a critical writing studies in Canada? What disciplines operate and intersect within writing studies? What methods are available for addressing troubling theoretical, pedagogical, and methodological practices within writing studies and across institutional approaches to writing instruction?
  • In what ways are genres and genre categories being shaped by Indigenous epistemologies and methods?
  • What constraints and affordances do language-diverse students and/or teachers experience in writing classrooms (NCTE, 1974)? How is language diversity viewed by teachers across disciplines and hiring committees within writing studies? How might scholarships, awards, position statements, faculty development challenge barriers to language diversity and translanguaging pedagogies?
  • How might the concept of bridging be critically examined? How does bridge-building reinforce exclusions or create divides? What can be learned from bridge failure and collapse? System hacking? System hospicing (Andreotti et al.)?
  • How can CASDW-ACR become an organization that drives a critical writing studies in Canada and beyond?

Proposals predominantly draw on work in writing studies, rhetorical genre studies, rhetorical theory, rhetorical analysis, writing centre theory and practice, and professional and technical writing research and practice.

In concert with the call, we encourage non-traditional formats and interdisciplinary collaborations. Tell us what you’d like to do and in how much time. Proposals for traditionally formatted papers, panels, and workshops are welcome, of course. Please consult past programs if you would like to learn more about the work presented at CASDW-ACR, and be sure to consider principles of accessibility, inclusivity, and diversity in your proposed session.

New proposal submission deadline: January 20th, 2020

Submission Information

To submit your proposal, please follow this two-step submission procedure:

  1. Complete the submission form, which asks you to provide your personal information as well as the title and short description of your session for the conference program. Access the submission form here or via this link: https://forms.gle/Vh6CjGkFrQjGTpoH9.
  2. Submit a de-identified version of your proposal as .docx file with your session title as the document title here.
    This anonymized proposal submission must include:
    • Session title
    • Session format
    • Short description (75 words)
    • Keywords, e.g., rhetorical genre studies (to help identify reviewers with appropriate expertise)
    • Detailed proposal (250 words)
    • References

Please direct any questions or comments to the Program Chair, Dana Landry.

Accepted presenters will be asked to pay the CASDW-ACR membership fee in order to be included on the 2020 Conference Program. For more information about CASDW-ACR and to join the association or renew your membership, please visit our website. For more information about the Congress or to register, please visit their website.

References

Andreotti, V., Stein, S., Ahenakew, C., & Hunt, D. (2015). Mapping interpretations of decolonization in the context of higher education.” Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society, 4(1), 21-40.

Inoue, A. (2019). How do we language so people stop killing each other, or what do we do about White Language Supremacy?” CCCC Chair’s Address. Pittsburgh.

Students’ right to their own language. (1974). Conference on College Composition and Communication, 25. Retrieved from https://www2.ncte.org/statement/students-right-to-their-own-language/.

Ratcliffe, K. (2005). Rhetorical listening: Identification, gender, whiteness. Southern Illinois University Press.

Announcement: Canadian Journal for Studies in Discourse and Writing/Rédactologie,Volume 29

Volume 29 of the Canadian Journal for Studies in Discourse and Writing/Rédactologie is complete, and all articles are available to read on the website. An editorial overview of the volume can be found here.

Canadian Journal for Studies in Discourse and Writing/Rédactologie

Volume 29 (2019)

Editorial

Taking Stock and Looking Forward: 2019 Year-End Editorial, Sibo Chen, pp. 243–245

Articles

Social Media Storytelling: Using Blogs and Twitter to Create a Community of Practice for Writing Scholarship, Kim M. Mitchell, pp. 1-23

Harnessing Sources in the Humanities: A Corpus-based Investigation of Citation Practices in English Literary Studies, Peter F. Grav, pp. 24-50

Learner-Created Podcasts: Fostering Information Literacies in a Writing Course, Stephanie Bell, pp. 51-63

A Foucauldian-Vygotskian Analysis of the Pedagogy of Academic Integrity, Stephanie Crook, pp. 64-80

Digital Plagiarism in Second Language Writing: Re-Thinking Relationality in Internet-Mediated Writing, Eugenia Gene Vasilopoulos, pp. 81-106

Reflecting on Assessment: Strategies and Tools for Measuring the Impact of a Canadian WAC Program, Michael Kaler, Tyler Evans-Tokaryk, pp. 107-132

Special: Writing Instructors, Academic Labour, and Professional Development

Writing Instruction, Academic Labour, and Professional Development, Heidi Darroch, Micaela Maftei, Sara Humphreys, pp. 133-136

What Every Writing Teacher Should Know and Be Able to Do: Reading Outcomes for Faculty Members, Alice Horning, pp. 137-147

Surface and Depth: Metalanguage and Professional Development in Canadian Writing Studies, Katja Thieme, pp. 148-158

Writing as Responsive, Situated Practice: The Case for Rhetoric in Canadian Writing Studies, Michael Lukas, Tim Personn, pp. 160-172

Cross-border teaching experiences in Canada and the U.S.: A writing teacher reflects, Laura Dunbar, pp. 173-183

Special: Selected Papers from CWCA 2018

Introduction to the Special Section of Conference Proceedings from the 2018 Canadian Writing Centres Association, Nadine Fladd, Liv C. Marken, pp. 184–195

Steps on the Path towards Decolonization: A Reflection on Learning, Experience, and Practice in Academic Support at the University of Manitoba, Monique Dumontet, Marion Kiprop, Carla Loewen, pp. 196–216

The The Power of Deficit Discourses in Student Talk about Writing, Shurli Makmillen, Kim Norman, pp. 217-237

EAL Writers and Peer Tutors: Pedagogies that Resist the “Broken Writer” Myth, Daniel Chang, Amanda Goldrick-Jones, pp. 238–242

Call for Proposals: Twelfth Annual CASDW-ACR Conference

Banner

Twelfth Annual CASDW-ACR Conference

Visions for Writing Studies

May 30 – June 1, 2020

London, Ontario

CALL FOR PROPOSALS PDF (Bilingual)

The Canadian Association for the Study of Discourse and Writing-l’Association Canadienne de rédactologie welcomes proposals for workshops and research presentations on any current topic/issue in the study and teaching of writing, communication, discourse, and language. We encourage interdisciplinary and inter-organizational collaborations.

This year’s Congress theme calls attention to divisions and exclusions across the academy. Divisions can be viewed in multiple ways in terms of:

  • fields, foci, and research methods;
  • institutional contexts and Canadian and international sites of scholarship;
  • the hierarchies in which administrators, tenured and untenured faculty, instructors, and students are caught up;
  • and access, accommodation, inclusion, and equity for scholars, students, professionals, and publics within communities of practice.

Like many disciplines, writing studies has a whiteness problem (Ratcliffe, 2005; Inoue, 2019), including its tacit approval of settler colonial practices of “white, language supremacy” (Inoue, p.16). Grappling with this problem must involve attending to the absences—or absent presences—in the demographics of writing studies’ conferences, special interest groups, teaching, hiring, and citation practices. Doing so can drive both important research about the ways writing reflects and addresses settler colonialism and racial inequality and the development of a more critical writing studies.

This year’s Congress call invites us to pay critical attention to important questions at the heart of writing studies.

  • What visions are there for a critical writing studies in Canada? What disciplines operate and intersect within writing studies? What methods are available for addressing troubling theoretical, pedagogical, and methodological practices within writing studies and across institutional approaches to writing instruction?
  • In what ways are genres and genre categories being shaped by Indigenous epistemologies and methods?
  • What constraints and affordances do language-diverse students and/or teachers experience in writing classrooms (NCTE, 1974)? How is language diversity viewed by teachers across disciplines and hiring committees within writing studies? How might scholarships, awards, position statements, faculty development challenge barriers to language diversity and translanguaging pedagogies?
  • How might the concept of bridging be critically examined? How does bridge-building reinforce exclusions or create divides? What can be learned from bridge failure and collapse? System hacking? System hospicing (Andreotti et al.)?
  • How can CASDW-ACR become an organization that drives a critical writing studies in Canada and beyond?

Proposals predominantly draw on work in writing studies, rhetorical genre studies, rhetorical theory, rhetorical analysis, writing centre theory and practice, and professional and technical writing research and practice.

In concert with the call, we encourage non-traditional formats and interdisciplinary collaborations. Tell us what you’d like to do and in how much time. Proposals for traditionally formatted papers, panels, and workshops are welcome, of course. Please consult past programs if you would like to learn more about the work presented at CASDW-ACR, and be sure to consider principles of accessibility, inclusivity, and diversity in your proposed session.

New proposal submission deadline: January 20th, 2020

Submission Information

To submit your proposal, please follow this two-step submission procedure:

  1. Complete the submission form, which asks you to provide your personal information as well as the title and short description of your session for the conference program. Access the submission form here or via this link: https://forms.gle/Vh6CjGkFrQjGTpoH9.
  2. Submit a de-identified version of your proposal as .docx file with your session title as the document title here.
    This anonymized proposal submission must include:
    • Session title
    • Session format
    • Short description (75 words)
    • Keywords, e.g., rhetorical genre studies (to help identify reviewers with appropriate expertise)
    • Detailed proposal (250 words)
    • References

Please direct any questions or comments to the Program Chair, Dana Landry.

Accepted presenters will be asked to pay the CASDW-ACR membership fee in order to be included on the 2020 Conference Program. For more information about CASDW-ACR and to join the association or renew your membership, please visit our website. For more information about the Congress or to register, please visit their website.

References

Andreotti, V., Stein, S., Ahenakew, C., & Hunt, D. (2015). Mapping interpretations of decolonization in the context of higher education.” Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society, 4(1), 21-40.

Inoue, A. (2019). How do we language so people stop killing each other, or what do we do about White Language Supremacy?” CCCC Chair’s Address. Pittsburgh.

Students’ right to their own language. (1974). Conference on College Composition and Communication, 25. Retrieved from https://www2.ncte.org/statement/students-right-to-their-own-language/.

Ratcliffe, K. (2005). Rhetorical listening: Identification, gender, whiteness. Southern Illinois University Press.

Job Opportunity: Post Doctoral Researcher, English Department, University of Delaware

The Department of English at the University of Delaware invites applications for multiple postdoctoral positions starting August 1, 2020. Successful candidates will be engaged in the theory and practice of teaching critical writing and will be asked to draw on their pedagogical and scholarly training to design a seminar-style course introducing students to writing at the university. The candidate will join a vibrant growing cadre of postdoctoral colleagues in our department.

Review of applications will begin on February 3, 2020 and will continue until positions are filled. Full details and application procedures can be found here.

Job Opportunities: School of Journalism, Writing, and Media, University of British Columbia

The School of Journalism, Writing, and Media in the Faculty of Arts at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, invites applications for a full-time tenure-stream position at the rank of Associate Professor, beginning July 1, 2020. Review of applications will begin on February 3, 2020 and will continue until the position is filled. More information can be found here, and the online application form can be found here.

The School of Journalism, Writing, and Media in the Faculty of Arts at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, invites applications for a tenure-track position, to begin July 1, 2020, with appointment at the rank of Instructor (in UBC’s Educational Leadership stream). Review of applications will begin on February 3, 2020 and will continue until the position is filled. More information can be found here, and the online application form can be found here.