Off-campus UNL users: To download campus access dissertations, please use the following link to log into our proxy server with your NU ID and password. When you are done browsing please remember to return to this page and log out.

Non-UNL users: Please talk to your librarian about requesting this dissertation through interlibrary loan.

Rhetoric as inquiry: Personal writing and academic success in the English classroom

Erica E Rogers, University of Nebraska - Lincoln

Abstract

Holistic and critical pedagogy, an approach to learning and teaching, integrates the everyday realities students live, with the systemic and institutional objectives of education itself. Working with theories from composition, rhetoric, feminist studies, and cognitive psychology from a teacher-researcher perspective, this dissertation explores and theorizes holistic, critical pedagogy within the composition classroom while outlining the use of personal writing as a means to develop critical consciousness. Student study participants kept “Inquiry Notebooks,” semester-long personal writing projects that served as receptacles for practical and theoretical engagement with a variety of texts and ideas, then interviewed after the course to discuss their learning outcomes and discoveries. Rhetorical and critical analysis of classroom artifacts, assignments, Inquiry Notebooks, and interview transcripts made students’ “epistemic assumptions” (Qualley 1997) and “identity process-styles” (Berzonsky 2004) visible, making it possible to map what they learned and decided not to learn. Inviting discussion of how epistemic assumptions and identity process-styles influence student learning outcomes, this dissertation makes the case for holistic, critical pedagogy as a means to tend to student needs as human beings coming to know about themselves, and the world around them.

Subject Area

Pedagogy|Education|Rhetoric

Recommended Citation

Rogers, Erica E, "Rhetoric as inquiry: Personal writing and academic success in the English classroom" (2016). ETD collection for University of Nebraska-Lincoln. AAI10255703.
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/dissertations/AAI10255703

Share

COinS