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Public Scholars & Public Scholarship
In reading Jennifer’s first blog entry in our reflection on public scholarly acts I’m reminded how much our scholarly identities impact our what we do in the classroom as teachers. Although we have scholarship that discusses …
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| November 20 2011 | CommentsPosted in
Public Learning & Identity
I want to start by thanking @rhetorjjb for her twitter post that kicked off the need to do this reflecting.
@rhetorjjb and I have decided we want to explore this …
...Continued
| October 11 2011 | CommentsPosted in
Yes, I have misspelled Technophile. This is the first way I spelled it when I came up with the title for the blog. And yes, I finally finished up my PhD in English; you would think that I would be a fabulous speller; however, I’m not. I think leaving the misspelling in the title will help remind me, and hopefully my readers, that blogs are publications about immediacy. Yeah, yeah…they are reflective, but they are to be more of an immediate reaction. Continued...
Random Entry of Interest
Let’s make skinny the fashion for scholarship
Reading Saikat Majumdar’s (2007) opinion piece “The Fetish of Fullness” (College English, 69(6), 642-654), relatively soon after reading Jakob Nielsen’s (2007) “Write Articles, Not Blog Postings” has returned me to thinking about scholarship in the …
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| July 26 2007 | CommentsPosted in 21st Century Scholarship