Full metadata
Title
Writing, programs, and administration at Arizona State University: the first hundred years
Description
Composition historians have increasingly recognized that local histories help test long-held theories about the development of composition in higher education. As Gretchen Flesher Moon argues, local histories complicate our notions of students, teachers, institutions, and influences and add depth and nuance to the dominant narrative of composition history. Following the call for local histories in rhetoric and composition, this study is a local history of composition at Arizona State University (ASU) from 1885-1985. This study focuses on the institutional influences that shaped writing instruction as the school changed from a normal school to teachers` college, state college, and research university during its first century in existence. Building from archival research and oral histories, this dissertation argues that four national movements in higher education--the normal school movement, the standardization and accreditation movement, the "university-status movement," and the research and tenure movement--played a formative role in the development of writing instruction at Arizona State University. This dissertation, therefore, examines the effects of these movements as they filtered into the writing curriculum at ASU. I argue that faculty and administrators` responses to these movements directly influenced the place of writing instruction in the curriculum, which consequently shaped who took writing courses and who taught them, as well as how, what, and when writing was taught. This dissertation further argues that considering ASU`s history in relation to the movements noted above has implications for composition historians attempting to understand broader developments in composition history during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Notwithstanding ASU`s unique circumstances, these movements had profound effects at institutions across the country, shaping missions, student populations, and institutional expectations. Although ASU`s local history is filled with idiosyncrasies and peculiarities that highlight the school`s distinctiveness, ASU is representative of hundreds of institutions across the country that were influenced by national education movements which are often invisible in the dominant narrative of composition history. As such, this history upholds the goal of local histories by complicating our notions of students, teachers, institutions, and influences and adding depth and nuance to our understanding of how composition developed in institutions of American higher education.
Date Created
2011
Contributors
- Skinnell, Ryan (Author)
- Goggin, Maureen Daly (Thesis advisor)
- Roen, Duane (Thesis advisor)
- Matsuda, Paul Kei (Committee member)
- Rose, Shirley K. (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
- Language, Rhetoric and Composition
- Accreditation
- history
- Normal School
- Tenure
- University
- Writing
- English language--Rhetoric--Study and teaching (Higher)--Arizona--Tempe--History--19th century.
- English language
- English language--Rhetoric--Study and teaching (Higher)--Arizona--Tempe--History--20th century.
- English language
Resource Type
Extent
viii, 261 p
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.8982
Statement of Responsibility
by Ryan Skinnell
Description Source
Retrieved on Jan. 17, 2012
Level of coding
full
Note
thesis
Partial requirement for: Ph. D., Arizona State University, 2011
bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (p. 226-257)
Field of study: English
System Created
- 2011-08-12 03:47:38
System Modified
- 2021-08-30 01:54:35
- 3 years 2 months ago
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