By DeWitt Scott. Traditionally, graduate school has focused on preparing students to become future scholars who seek to live a life of the mind, produce cutting edge research, and become professors at 4-year institutions. Read more...
Learning to Talk Race in the Classroom
By Madeleine Elfenbein. By now, most of us recognize race as central to just about every field of social and humanistic inquiry. We know there’s a broad and growing field of scholarship on contemporary and historical conceptions of race, and plenty of public scholars eager to put those resources to work for us in our classrooms (e.g., the #FergusonSyllabus, the #CharlestonSyllabus, and many more). Read more...
Encouraging Participation in Your Classroom
By Shira Lurie. Heather’s excellent post on fostering on active online discussion got me thinking about analog participation. That is, participation in the classroom. It can be tricky to foster a lively discussion every week, especially one that includes all of the students in the class. Read more...
Stop Feeding the Trolls!
By Patrick Bigsby. I was a deer in the headlights the first time a student attacked me with words online. A few weeks into my first digital course, a student, convinced that his thesis was both present (it wasn’t) and effective (nope), became very angry with me over his poor assignment grade. Read more...
Of MOOCs and Metrics

Community-Engaged Research

Overworked and Underpaid: The Labor and Laborers of the Writing Classroom
By John Warner. Last week I went to my first ever academic conference,[1] the meeting of the Carolina Writing Program Administrators[2]. Read more...
To "Quit Lit" or not to "Quit Lit." What Was the Question?
By John Warner. I am generally agnostic about the genre. I do not object to its existence any more than I would object to any category of personal writing, and I’d be lying if I hadn’t occasionally indulged in the composition of a version of my own quit lit piece in my head over the years. Read more...