Re-Seeing Composition: Object Oriented Reflective Teaching Practice

abstract: This dissertation presents reflective teaching practices that draw from an object-oriented rhetorical framework. In it, practices are offered that prompt teachers and students to account for the interdependent relationships between objects and writers. These practices aid in re-envisioning...

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Other Authors: Hopkins, Steven Wayne (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.44118
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-44118
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-441182018-06-22T03:08:23Z Re-Seeing Composition: Object Oriented Reflective Teaching Practice abstract: This dissertation presents reflective teaching practices that draw from an object-oriented rhetorical framework. In it, practices are offered that prompt teachers and students to account for the interdependent relationships between objects and writers. These practices aid in re-envisioning writing as materially situated and leads to more thoughtful collaborations between writers and objects. Through these practices, students gain a more sophisticated understanding of their own writing processes, teachers gain a more nuanced understanding of the outcomes of their pedagogical choices, and administrators gain a clearer vision of how the classroom itself affects curriculum design and implementation. This argument is pursued in several chapters, each presenting a different method for inciting reflection through the consideration of human/object interaction. The first chapter reviews the literature of object oriented rhetorical theory and reflective teaching practice. The second chapter adapts a methodology from the field of Organizational Science called Narrative Network Analysis (NNA) and leads students through a process of identifying and describing human/object interaction within narratives and asks students to represent these relationships visually. As students undertake this task they can more objectively examine their own writing processes. In the third chapter, video ethnographic methodologies are used to observe object oriented rhetoric theory in practice through the interactions of humans and objects in the writing classroom. Through three video essays, clips of footage taken of a writing classroom and its writing objects are selected and juxtaposed to highlight the agency and influence of objects. In chapter four, a tool developed using freely available cloud-based web applications is presented which is termed the “Fitness Tracker for Teaching.” This tool is used to regularly collect, store, and analyze data that students self-report through a daily class survey about their work efforts, their work environment, and their feelings of confidence, productivity, and self-efficacy. The data gathered through this tool provides a more complete understanding of student effort and affect than could be provided by the teacher’s and students’ own memories or perceptions. Together these chapters provide a set of reflective practices that reinforce teaching writing as a process that is affective and embodied and acknowledges and accounts for the rhetorical agency of objects. Dissertation/Thesis Chapter 3 Video Presentation Hopkins, Steven Wayne (Author) Rose, Shirley K. (Advisor) Goggin, Maureen (Committee member) Boyd, Patricia (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Rhetoric Pedagogy Composition Digital Video Fitness Tracker Narrative Network Analysis Object Oriented Reflective Teaching Practice eng 145 pages Doctoral Dissertation English 2017 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.44118 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2017
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Rhetoric
Pedagogy
Composition
Digital Video
Fitness Tracker
Narrative Network Analysis
Object Oriented
Reflective Teaching Practice
spellingShingle Rhetoric
Pedagogy
Composition
Digital Video
Fitness Tracker
Narrative Network Analysis
Object Oriented
Reflective Teaching Practice
Re-Seeing Composition: Object Oriented Reflective Teaching Practice
description abstract: This dissertation presents reflective teaching practices that draw from an object-oriented rhetorical framework. In it, practices are offered that prompt teachers and students to account for the interdependent relationships between objects and writers. These practices aid in re-envisioning writing as materially situated and leads to more thoughtful collaborations between writers and objects. Through these practices, students gain a more sophisticated understanding of their own writing processes, teachers gain a more nuanced understanding of the outcomes of their pedagogical choices, and administrators gain a clearer vision of how the classroom itself affects curriculum design and implementation. This argument is pursued in several chapters, each presenting a different method for inciting reflection through the consideration of human/object interaction. The first chapter reviews the literature of object oriented rhetorical theory and reflective teaching practice. The second chapter adapts a methodology from the field of Organizational Science called Narrative Network Analysis (NNA) and leads students through a process of identifying and describing human/object interaction within narratives and asks students to represent these relationships visually. As students undertake this task they can more objectively examine their own writing processes. In the third chapter, video ethnographic methodologies are used to observe object oriented rhetoric theory in practice through the interactions of humans and objects in the writing classroom. Through three video essays, clips of footage taken of a writing classroom and its writing objects are selected and juxtaposed to highlight the agency and influence of objects. In chapter four, a tool developed using freely available cloud-based web applications is presented which is termed the “Fitness Tracker for Teaching.” This tool is used to regularly collect, store, and analyze data that students self-report through a daily class survey about their work efforts, their work environment, and their feelings of confidence, productivity, and self-efficacy. The data gathered through this tool provides a more complete understanding of student effort and affect than could be provided by the teacher’s and students’ own memories or perceptions. Together these chapters provide a set of reflective practices that reinforce teaching writing as a process that is affective and embodied and acknowledges and accounts for the rhetorical agency of objects. === Dissertation/Thesis === Chapter 3 Video Presentation === Doctoral Dissertation English 2017
author2 Hopkins, Steven Wayne (Author)
author_facet Hopkins, Steven Wayne (Author)
title Re-Seeing Composition: Object Oriented Reflective Teaching Practice
title_short Re-Seeing Composition: Object Oriented Reflective Teaching Practice
title_full Re-Seeing Composition: Object Oriented Reflective Teaching Practice
title_fullStr Re-Seeing Composition: Object Oriented Reflective Teaching Practice
title_full_unstemmed Re-Seeing Composition: Object Oriented Reflective Teaching Practice
title_sort re-seeing composition: object oriented reflective teaching practice
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.44118
_version_ 1718701438436114432