What about our work? That's what I was thinking about. I am not
suggesting any lack of value to publishing students' work.
I also like the idea of the polyvocalic dialogues that can take place
in a cyber classroom. A situation which would require the students to
generate text and think.
Any chance to preview the article? I'd be interested in (oh dear) a
monologic "essay" on the issue from you.
Mike Hamende
______________________________ Reply Separator _________________________________
Subject: Re: Re[8]: Reassessing our practices
Author: CyberJournal for Rhetoric and Writing
<RHETNT-L@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu> at Internet-mail
Date: 2/15/96 11:23 AM
Well, in terms of "alternative publishing," I have three simple words:
World Wide Web.
I'm in the midst of writing an article about this now, but to be pretty
basic and utopian about it for a moment, it seems to me that using the
Web as a means of publishing student work addreses a lot of the issues
we're discussing here.
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Steve Krause * Department of English * Bowling Green State University
Bowling Green, OH * 43403 * (419) 372-8934 *skrause@bgnet.bgsu.edu
On the WWW at http://ernie.bgsu.edu/~skrause/CV/Main.html
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