The power of writing : Dartmouth '66 in the twenty-first century /

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Bibliographic Details
Imprint:Hanover, New Hampshire : Dartmouth College Press, [2015]
Description:1 online resource (157 pages
Language:English
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11243027
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Blewett, Kelly, editor.
Donahue, Christiane, editor.
ISBN:9781611687408
1611687403
9781611687408
1611687403
9781611687620
9781611687392
1611687624
9781611687620
161168739X
9781611687392
Notes:Includes index.
English.
Print version record.
Summary:Why writing matters in higher education.
Other form:Print version: Power of writing. Hanover, New Hampshire : Dartmouth College Press, [2015]
Description
Summary:At the 1966 Dartmouth Seminar, scholars gathered to debate the direction of English Studies in the academy. This debate had far-reaching effects and arguably forever changed writing instruction in the United States. To commemorate the 45th anniversary of this gathering, Dartmouth College hosted an event both celebrating the past and looking toward the future. Then as now, there is this simple truth: writing well matters, and it matters in institutions of higher education across disciplines. Yet what it means to be a good writer in the academy and in the public sphere remains a site of controversy and discussion. The Power of Writing: Dartmouth '66 in the Twenty-First Century argues that any discussion of why writing well matters should extend beyond composition and rhetoric scholars to capture the knowledge that outstanding teachers and writers themselves put to work every day. The editors have brought together scholars and public intellectuals (including New York Times best-selling authors David McCullough and Steve Strogatz) from the sciences, social sciences, humanities, and interdisciplinary fields to engage in a dialogue about some of the controversial questions related to writing today. Readers will engage with questions about what it means to write well and how different answers affect the teaching and learning of writing in higher education. Each anchor article--representing disciplines as varied as musicology, African studies, mathematics, and history--receives responses from Dartmouth faculty and nationally renowned faculty members in writing studies programs. This timely and wide-ranging collection will have appeal far beyond writing instructors and is specifically designed for readers across disciplines.
Item Description:Includes index.
Physical Description:1 online resource (157 pages
ISBN:9781611687408
1611687403
9781611687620
9781611687392
1611687624
161168739X