Reminder: ReVision & ReForm: Teaching Writing Across Borders

deadline for submissions: 
October 15, 2019
full name / name of organization: 
New York University

REVISION & REFORM: TEACHING WRITING ACROSS BORDERS

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY

APRIL 24-25, 2020

ReVision & ReForm: Teaching Writing Across Borders seeks to bring together writing faculty, program administrators, and scholars from across the disciplines—and across the globe—to discuss how we might better align writing pedagogies with the ethical and political realities of writing in the 21st century. An international symposium hosted by the NYU Expository Writing Program, NYU Abu Dhabi, and the NYU Department of English, ReVision & ReForm will take place April 24-25, 2020 at the NYU Tandon School of Engineering in Brooklyn, New York, with a keynote address by Professor Suresh Canagarajah, the Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of Applied Linguistics, English, and Asian Studies at Pennsylvania State University.

First-year writing occurs at a crucial point in the education of students, establishing a foundation for a lifetime of reading, writing, and critical thinking in academic settings and beyond. We invite participants to consider the following questions as they propose paper and panel presentations:

  • How can first-year writing courses foster student agency and engagement? What does it mean to teach writing “across borders” and what does border-crossing entail?

  • What types of philosophical and pedagogical questions arise when writing is taught in culturally, linguistically, and rhetorically diverse settings?

  • How can first-year writing help multilingual students, in particular, tap into their existing linguistic and cultural knowledge? What is the role of translingual pedagogy in writing instruction?

  • What kinds of writing pedagogy promote knowledge transfer? How can the Teaching for Transfer movement inform writing instruction across disciplines?

  • How can anti-racist writing pedagogy and assessment be implemented in curricula, classrooms, writing centers, and other sites of learning throughout the university?

  • How can contingent writing faculty make their work as teachers, scholars, and creative writers more visible within their institutions? How can we ensure that our vision for writing studies recognizes the ethical and political realities of teaching writing in the 21st century?

Although we encourage papers and panels that reflect the conference theme, we welcome proposals from all areas that English and Writing departments encompass: creative writing, cultural studies, developmental education, English as a second language, literary studies, multicultural literature, popular culture, progressive education, writing across the curriculum, and technical writing.

Proposals are due by October 15, 2019. Please submit a 250-word paper proposal; to propose a panel, include a 350-word description and information for all participants (4 maximum). Participants will be notified of acceptance by December 15, 2019. If you are interested in applying for a travel grant, or if you have any questions, please contact us: nyu2020symposium@gmail.com. Submit here [https://forms.gle/LwGs84YT37p3BB8K7].

More information can be found on our website: [https://www.nyu2020symposium.com/]