The newest issue of @XchangesJournal (Issue 16.2) is live! Check out https://t.co/agIfuzv8Ae to read some amazing scholarship from emerging voices in rhetoric, WAC, and technical communication. Save some articles for Spring Break reading!
If you or someone you know wants to join the @XchangesJournal team to really reinvent their social media, please contact Julianne Newmark! We are looking to breath new life into this position! (July 11 deadline)
Marion, a chem major, began drafting this manuscript in my undergrad Rhetoric of Science class at @myrwu and kept working on it for another year before submitting, then revised through the review process to get it here. Let's celebrate Marion's perseverance and accomplishments!
As you close out the semester, consider giving Marion Olsen's "Examining Equity in Accessibility to Undergraduate Scientific Research" a read! Published in Xchanges' issue 16.2, it examines undergraduate research with an IRB-approved study. It's here!: https://t.co/2pssfrKi4Y
If you love projects from @TheJUMPPlus, check out this project from @XchangesJournal: “Understanding the Experiences of Technical Writers in New Zealand and Australia” from their latest issue: https://t.co/bLMRhOZhFC
Today's a great day to check out Alicia Furlan's article "From Industry to Creativity: The Westinghouse Memorial and the Evolution of Pittsburgh," recently released as part of Issue 16.2 of @XchangesJournal 😀 : https://t.co/kadDsYTqal
We are excited to announce the launch of More Than Memos!
MTM makes engaging and accessible content that highlights advances in the field of #techcomm. We're a team of TPC students and scholars who are excited to amplify the work of our growing field. Stay tuned to learn more!
Be sure to read Brooke Eubanks' "Rugged Truth: Individualism in Chicago’s Prominent
Newspapers throughout the 1920-1930s," just released in Issue 16.2 of @XchangesJournal, right here: https://t.co/l4tGnftFJz
Today we're highlighting Brooke Eubanks' article "Rugged Truth: Individualism in Chicago’s Prominent Newspapers throughout the 1920-1930s," published in @XchangesJournal 's just-released issue 16.2! You can read it here: https://t.co/l4tGnftFJz
"The manipulative silence of minority history writes a narrative in favor of white people, such
as the ones presented in the Chicago Tribune. Writing (or rewriting) an inclusive history
works to provide equal opportunity and livelihoods in the United States."
If you have some free time this week, consider checking out "Rhetorical Style Analysis of the Statement of Purpose (SP) Genre: A Shared Understanding of Lexis in Successful SPs" from @XchangesJournal author Priyanka Ganguly, published in issue 16.1 🎉 https://t.co/fUQwlM9ybI
We're really excited to share Analeigh E. Horton's article, recently published in @XchangesJournal's new issue 16.1, titled "Using Contact Zone Concepts to Teach Critical Autoethnography to Multilingual Writers in Foundational Composition." Check it out!: https://t.co/C69mr4J8xa
Consider checking out Dan Harrigan's article, recently published in @XchangesJournal's newest issue, titled
"Reimagining Activist Data: A Critique of the STOP AAPI HATE Reports through a Cultural Rhetorics Lens." You can find the article here: https://t.co/eduhfG94Pm