If Collins, Brown, and Newman (1989) are right in suggesting that ‘‘apprenticeship is the way we learn most naturally’ ’ (p. 491), then the most natural way to learn the deep-thinking art of rhetorical criticism must be as an apprentice to a master of critical thought. But how does one think critically? Can it be described? Can it be taught, even by a master thinker? Mark Stoner and Sally Perkins, who collaborated in teaching both instructional communication and rhetorical criticism at California State University, Sacramento, contend that, yes, thinking can be taught in much the way an apprentice would learn music-making, pot-throwing, or carpentry from a master. Making Sense of Messages pursues the twin goals of teaching undergraduates how...
Edited by Jim A. Kuypers.Includes chapter co-written by former College at Brockport faculty member F...
More critical thinking and greater transfer seem to be the rallying cries of educational reforme...
As a rhetoric scholar, I obviously applaud David Grant’s claim that effective writing instruction ne...
Making Sense of Messages Making Sense of Messages, now in its second edition, retains the ...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 173-179)Synthesizing the components of good teaching at ...
Since its beginning, modern composition has asked how a writing process understood as a process of...
No matter where students’ lives lead after graduation, one of the most essential tools we can teach ...
There is a serious crisis in education. Students often do not want to learn and teachers do not want...
Students rarely question the relevance of most communication courses. For example, most students rea...
Learning to argue is one of the central objectives in education. Whether it is conducting a formal d...
This course is an introduction to the theory, the practice, and the implications (both social and et...
Like faculty in most colleges and universities, professors at the University of Rhode Island (URI) h...
THE RHETORICAL ACT: THINKING, SPEAKING AND WRITING CRITICALLY, Fourth Edition, teaches you how to cr...
Having studied philosophy intensely for ten years and then spent twenty years in the computer indust...
In teaching Conceptual and Historical Issues in Psychology (CHIP), it is often assumed that students...
Edited by Jim A. Kuypers.Includes chapter co-written by former College at Brockport faculty member F...
More critical thinking and greater transfer seem to be the rallying cries of educational reforme...
As a rhetoric scholar, I obviously applaud David Grant’s claim that effective writing instruction ne...
Making Sense of Messages Making Sense of Messages, now in its second edition, retains the ...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 173-179)Synthesizing the components of good teaching at ...
Since its beginning, modern composition has asked how a writing process understood as a process of...
No matter where students’ lives lead after graduation, one of the most essential tools we can teach ...
There is a serious crisis in education. Students often do not want to learn and teachers do not want...
Students rarely question the relevance of most communication courses. For example, most students rea...
Learning to argue is one of the central objectives in education. Whether it is conducting a formal d...
This course is an introduction to the theory, the practice, and the implications (both social and et...
Like faculty in most colleges and universities, professors at the University of Rhode Island (URI) h...
THE RHETORICAL ACT: THINKING, SPEAKING AND WRITING CRITICALLY, Fourth Edition, teaches you how to cr...
Having studied philosophy intensely for ten years and then spent twenty years in the computer indust...
In teaching Conceptual and Historical Issues in Psychology (CHIP), it is often assumed that students...
Edited by Jim A. Kuypers.Includes chapter co-written by former College at Brockport faculty member F...
More critical thinking and greater transfer seem to be the rallying cries of educational reforme...
As a rhetoric scholar, I obviously applaud David Grant’s claim that effective writing instruction ne...