ABSTRACT

As digital reading has become more productive and active, the lines between reading and writing become more blurred. This book offers both an exploration of collaborative reading and pedagogical strategies for teaching reading and writing that reflect the realities of digital literacies.

This edited scholarly collection offers strategies for teaching reading and writing that highlight the possibilities, opportunities, and complexities of digital literacies. Part 1 explores reading and writing that happen digitally and offers frameworks for thinking about this process. Part 2 focuses on strategies for the classroom by applying reading theories, design principles, and rhetorical concepts to instruction. Part 3 introduces various disciplinary implications for this blended approach to writing instruction. What is emerging is new theories and practices of reading in both print and digital spaces—theories that account for how diverse student readers encounter and engage digital texts. This collection contributes to this work by offering strategies for sustaining reading and cultivating writing in this landscape of changing digital literacies.

The book is essential for the professional development of beginning teachers, who will appreciate the historical and bibliographic overview as well as classroom strategies, and for busy veteran teachers, who will gain updated knowledge and a renewed commitment to teaching an array of literacy skills. It will be ideal for graduate seminars in composition theory and pedagogy, both undergraduate and graduate; and teacher education courses, and will be key reading for scholars in rhetoric and composition interested in composition history, assessment, communication studies, and literature pedagogy.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

part 1|67 pages

Collaborative Reading

chapter 3|13 pages

Arguing with Ourselves

Rhetorical Reading and Algorithms on the Web

chapter 4|14 pages

A Difference in Delivery

Reading Classroom Technology Policies

part 2|104 pages

Teaching Writing and Reading in Digital Spaces

chapter 7|14 pages

Annotating with Google Docs

Bridging Collaborative Reading and Writing in the Composition Classroom

chapter 8|14 pages

Situating Design

Cultivating Digital Readers and Writers in the Composition Classroom

chapter 9|17 pages

Reading, Writing, Produsing

Fostering Student Authors in the Public Space

chapter 11|13 pages

Clip, Tag, Annotate

Active Reading Practices for Digital Texts

part 3|45 pages

Implications and Institutional Contexts

chapter 12|15 pages

Reading and Writing Digital Contexts Across Campus

From FYC and FYE to ME to CE

chapter 13|14 pages

Trending Information

Mapping Students’ Information Literacies Against WPA Learning Outcomes in First-Year Writing

chapter 14|14 pages

New Assessments for New Reading

An Evidence-Based Approach

chapter |5 pages

Afterword

“A Rapprochement of Reading and Writing”