Sunday, October 11, 2015

Week 7: Weweni, Cybertech, and Taking Care

Blog Prompt: Discuss something that has captured your attention the last few weeks of class

Having just returned from a conference, I’m going to take this week to talk about some of the conversations that took place there, as well as areas where ideas were sparked for me. Almost everything made me think back to Yancey's "Made Not Only in Words" and the idea of both writing across the curriculum/interdisciplinary writing and multi-modal composition.


The conference I just presented at was the regional Great Plains Alliance for Computers and Writing, one of my favorites because it’s where many people go to present their preliminary research or their works in progress. As a result, there’s more discussion and more interaction between the audience and the presenters, and it feels like a collaborative environment. At this conference, our keynote speaker was Dr. Jessica Huber from Purdue University, who studies in speech pathology and physical therapy. During her talk, she referenced the fact that she didn’t have a technical communication background, and it struck me then how great it is to implement interdisciplinary perspectives when we are trying to reach places of innovation in our work (the presentation was super cool by the way: "Using Wearable Devices and Repurposed Gaming Technology to Improve Quality of Life").

This conference, as well as one of the keynotes from last year’s Computers and Writing (Dr. Meg Noodin's "Weweni: Take Care" about Ojibwe poetry), make me really appreciative to be part of a field that defines itself, for the most part, as interdisciplinary. From Dr. Huber, I was inspired by looking at how the body and mind interact, with Dr. Noodin I was drawn by how culture, language, and art influence one another. Both presentations fueled my thinking in technical communication, and I think that’s one of greatest things about incorporating different perspectives into research and, ultimately, into composing.

Lately, I’ve been increasingly drawn to areas of accessibility studies, particularly cognitive diversity and looking at alternative problem-solving approaches. All of my readings have ascribed to the social model of disability, which in a (oversimplified) nutshell means that disability is caused not by the person/user/subject’s impairments, but by barriers created by society.  Studying accessibility has made me think about how we teach writing and composing—how we value some processes/thinking strategies over others. When I think about scaffolding models, I see both the value of consistently integrating course content, but I also wonder about the limits instructors should have in directing/guiding the composition process. I’ve recently read an article (not peer-reviewed) on dyslexia entitled Mind/Shift, which offered a critique for teaching to what I’ve been mentally calling the hegemonic mind.

Obviously, in teaching we need to give students the tools and skills to succeed in a vocational sense, but I also think there should be more avenues of exploration in writing and discovery. I want to learn more about how to connect studies of accessibility to composition, because I see that being an extremely helpful avenue for cultivating critical thinking skills, civic engagement, and diversity in thinking. When I think about more alternative teaching for composition (drawing to learn, multi-modal, etc.), I see it correlating to many areas of accessibility studies, where we need to incorporate diversity (cultural, cognitive, SES, racial, gender, etc.) from the foundation, allowing space for students to become innovative in process that is conductive to their own experiences. This mentality also makes me think of the article we read on Contact Zones, where diversity can't be added as a filter but must be embedded in the original code (to get all techy about it).

6 comments:

  1. Congratulations on the conference, Leah, and the proposal that came out of it. Nice to hear about how Yancey's thinking resonated in what you experienced at the conference. That's a great conference, btw. Just about every time I go to C&W, too, I come away with a spark of an idea that ends up as a course, another talk, an article, something. It's usually a very good investment of time and money going to a conference as a result. I've been having great conversations lately about how composition should include cultural awareness and understanding, as well. How can we understand audience when the world is much more globalized, for instance, if we only teaching writing without a global audience in mind? If you can, look up Sushil Oswal's work on accessibility. I've always been impressed by his reading and understanding. Nice connections to contact zones, technology, and the mind. You might be interested, too, in object-oriented rhetoric.

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    1. Thanks, I had a great time at it! I'm going to be working on a proposal for C&W this week, and hopefully that will get accepted so I can attend again this year! C&W (and GPACW, which I just attended) are my favorite conferences so far, since I feel like they've both been receptive toward less than conventional topics/discussions.

      Thanks a ton for the suggestion! I'm trying to read as much as I can on the topic so this will be a great start.

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  2. How did the conference go? Can you talk about what you learned during class?

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    1. The conference went great! And I'd be happy to-- I think I'll be attending the Friday session again this week, but one of the topics discussed was using Google Glass/augmented reality in composition which ties in nicely to what you showed us last Friday.

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  3. Leah, you're really making me reconsider what accessibility means in the classroom. For example, I'm starting to see how I as a teacher might think that learning how to write is very accessible (the student is in a writing course, I'm their writing teacher, there is a set curriculum designed especially for teaching them how to write), but the student might not think that these things are actually accessible things.

    I can see how RaiderWriter might make submitting assignments difficult and inaccessible. I can see how what I'm teaching might not be completely understood by students. I can also see how focusing on only one essay in one context can be very limiting.

    I had never really considered how accessible things should be to students in my classroom. Thanks for this!

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    1. That's awesome! Accessibility studies is a new area for me, too, and it's one that I've been increasingly drawn to. I see a lot of overlap with concerns of accessibility and post-process pedagogy.

      I can't speak to the student experience, but I've noticed that RaiderWriter is a difficult interface for me as a grader-- not being able to edit comments after posting them in particular is a difficult factor since a big part of my process is typos :'D. The formatting is also difficult in terms of almost no white space in the text, which makes the blocks run together when I read (I have really crappy vision, so I usually end up having to magnify my screen, sigh).

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