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    Teaching Discomfort: Students' and Teachers' Descriptions of Discomfort in First-year Writing Classes

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    Date
    2015-05-01
    Author
    Anastasia, Andrew G.
    Department
    English
    Advisor(s)
    Rachel Spilka
    Alice Gillam
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    “Teaching Discomfort: Students’ and Teachers’ Descriptions of Discomfort in First-Year Writing Classes” uses qualitative research in first-year composition classes to argue that the experiences of first-year writing students and teachers complicate composition’s paradoxical reliance upon and avoidance of psychological discomfort in composition classrooms. Students’ and teachers’ values regarding critical inquiry evince a complex link between the potential for discomfort to generate knowledge and unintended emotional consequences that are further complicated by long histories of the value of reason over emotion. Students’ perspectives, in particular, and the challenges they pose, can help the field rethink the role and value of discomfort in our established modes of teaching.
    Subject
    Composition Pedagogy
    Composition Studies
    Discomfort and Writing
    Emotion
    Pedagogy of Discomfort
    Teaching Discomfort
    Permanent Link
    http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/94262
    Type
    dissertation
    Part of
    • UW Milwaukee Electronic Theses and Dissertations

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