Remediating the professional classroom: the new rhetoric of teaching and learning

dc.contributor.advisor David R. Russell
dc.contributor.advisor Dorothy A. Winsor
dc.contributor.author Fisher, David
dc.contributor.department Department of English
dc.date 2018-08-24T21:31:33.000
dc.date.accessioned 2020-06-30T07:39:48Z
dc.date.available 2020-06-30T07:39:48Z
dc.date.copyright Sun Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 2006
dc.date.issued 2006-01-01
dc.description.abstract <p>The incarnation of many Internet-based courses is informed by traditional notions of classroom instruction, in which course/content management systems (CMSs) like WebCT and Blackboard are used to reproduce actions undertaken in brick-and-mortar classrooms. In this dissertation I argue that the way in which the CMS is configured and deployed can provide students with the sense that they are immersed in a social activity other than taking a college course. Elaborating on simulation-building methodologies, I show how we have created a CMS called MyCase that helps classroom instructors evoke and immerse students in discourse-demanding situations within several disciplines. This sense of immersion is especially important for communication-intensive courses in which students seek to practice disciplinary and workplace genres whose social motive may not be readily reproducible within the confines of the (computer) classroom;The dissertation details qualitative studies conducted in a management course and a professional communication course of students and instructors who used simulations built with MyCase. Results indicate that students participating in these simulations (1) attribute greater significance for their professional lives to the activities in which they engage within the simulation than they do to other classroom activities and (2) engage in activities that more closely match established definitions of active learning than other classroom activities, including those involving traditional (Harvard) case studies. In addition, by providing concrete examples of student actions, I argue that the affordances of an online environment for simulating time and space enable students to reflect on their practices and even engage in critique and critical practices (ranging from quotidian resistance to organized activism).</p>
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.identifier archive/lib.dr.iastate.edu/rtd/1484/
dc.identifier.articleid 2483
dc.identifier.contextkey 6094917
dc.identifier.doi https://doi.org/10.31274/rtd-180813-9926
dc.identifier.s3bucket isulib-bepress-aws-west
dc.identifier.submissionpath rtd/1484
dc.identifier.uri https://dr.lib.iastate.edu/handle/20.500.12876/68410
dc.language.iso en
dc.source.bitstream archive/lib.dr.iastate.edu/rtd/1484/3223017.PDF|||Fri Jan 14 20:27:30 UTC 2022
dc.subject.disciplines Communication Technology and New Media
dc.subject.disciplines Curriculum and Instruction
dc.subject.disciplines Education
dc.subject.disciplines Instructional Media Design
dc.subject.disciplines Social Psychology
dc.subject.disciplines Social Psychology and Interaction
dc.subject.keywords English
dc.subject.keywords Rhetoric and professional communication
dc.title Remediating the professional classroom: the new rhetoric of teaching and learning
dc.type dissertation
dc.type.genre dissertation
dspace.entity.type Publication
relation.isOrgUnitOfPublication a7f2ac65-89b1-4c12-b0c2-b9bb01dd641b
thesis.degree.level dissertation
thesis.degree.name Doctor of Philosophy
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