Skip to main content

EmpoWORD: Acknowledgements

EmpoWORD
Acknowledgements
    • Notifications
    • Privacy
  • Project HomeCharting Your First Semester
  • Projects
  • Learn more about Manifold

Notes

Show the following:

  • Annotations
  • Resources
Search within:

Adjust appearance:

  • font
    Font style
  • color scheme
  • Margins
table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Table Of Contents
  5. Acknowledgements
  6. Accessibility Statement
  7. How to Use This Book – Instructors
  8. How to Use This Book – Students
  9. General Introduction
  10. Section 1: Description, Narration, and Reflection
    1. Chapter One: Describing a Scene or Experience
    2. Chapter Two: Telling a Story
    3. Chapter Three: Reflecting on an Experience
    4. Assignment: Descriptive Personal Narrative
  11. Section 2: Text Wrestling
    1. Chapter Four: Interpretation, Analysis, and Close Reading
    2. Chapter Five: Summary and Response
    3. Chapter Six: Analysis and Synthesis
    4. Assignment: Text wrestling Analysis
  12. Section 3: Research and Argumentation
    1. Chapter Seven: Argumentation
    2. Chapter Eight: Research Concepts
    3. Chapter Nine: Interacting with Sources
    4. Assignment: Persuasive Research Essay
  13. Additional Readings: By Both Student and Professional Authors
  14. Appendix A: Concepts and Strategies for Revision
  15. Appendix B: Engaged Reading Strategies
  16. Appendix C: Metacognition
  17. Additional Recommended Resources
  18. Glossary
  19. Full Citations and Permissions

1

Acknowledgements

This project would not have been possible without the kind and generous support of my communities.

I am very grateful to Alex Dannemiller for his contributions to the content of this book, as well as his support as a peer reviewer. This book also integrates meaningful contributions from Jarrod Dunham, Karolinn Fiscalleti, Paul Lask, and Brian Gazaille. Further thanks to Jessica Lee and Brian Gazaille for serving as peer reviewers, and to Bridget Carrick for copy editing.

I would also like to thank the former students whose work has inspired and will sustain this book. While some have chosen to remain anonymous, the others are cited in the table of contents and the endnotes of sections in which their work appears. These students have not only shaped my pedagogy and worldview, but have (and continue to) inspire the many students who have followed in their paths and continue on to forge their own.

For their mentorship and inspiration, and especially those concepts that have become so integral to my teaching that they are here in this book, I thank Daniel Hershel, Michael Stuart, Susan Kirtley, Leni Zumas, Rachel Brett, Lily Harris, Leah Arvanitis, Mark Davies, Jeffrey Pegram, and Christine Potter.

I would not have been able to create this text without institutional support from Karen Bjork, Sharon Rivers, and Stephanie Doig of the Portland State University (PSU) Library; Laura Wilson and Kale Brewer of PSU’s Office of Academic Innovation; Susan Tardiff, Matt Swetnam, Brendan O’Guinn, and Chris Thomas of the PSU English Department; Susan Kirtley and Hildy Miller, Directors of Rhetoric and Composition at PSU; Paul Collins, PSU English Department Chair; and Lucas Bernhardt and Dan DeWeese of the PSU Writing Center.

And, lastly, I would be remiss to forget Linnea Wilhjelm, who has not simply tolerated my stress and whining throughout the duration of composing this text, but instead met it with patience, love, and encouragement.

Annotate

Next chapter
Accessibility Statement
PreviousNext
College Writing: Guides, Handbooks, and Advice
Copyright © 2018 by Shane Abrams. EmpoWORD: A Student-Centered Anthology and Handbook for College Writers by Shane Abrams is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.
Powered by Manifold Scholarship. Learn more at
Opens in new tab or windowmanifoldapp.org