This paper examines how gender impacts upon the participation women fiction authors in different communities of practice. While some communities of practice may provide valuable supports, in other instances, women may be systemically marginalized. The development of social media is also creating new opportunities and challenges for participation in virtual communities of practice for women writers
This Master's thesis is an Indigenous research project with a purpose of better understanding Indige...
Drawing on literature about place-based education and service-learning, as well as three groups* per...
grantor: University of TorontoThis inquiry examines some of the ways in which a woman read...
This paper draws upon research from a Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada study...
Connections between lifelong learning and fiction writing are explored by drawing upon the findings ...
Drawing upon the results of a Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) funde...
Sisters in Crime (SinC) is explored as a unique learning organization dedicated to addressing discri...
Female coterie writing groups have had certain characteristics in common across centuries that can ...
This paper draws upon findings from a research study on the relationship between fiction, citizenshi...
This guide aims to provide some insight into the ways two projects have approached writing with comm...
This study examines women’s engagements with popular romance fiction. Framing genres as sites of par...
This dissertation consists of four micro-case studies of intersectional feminist college students’ e...
This piece discusses the integration of women writers into a “Great Books” curriculum at a public un...
This interview-intensive interpretive study explores the stories of seven first-year women enrolled ...
Relationships have served as a cornerstone to feminist research in community-based research and serv...
This Master's thesis is an Indigenous research project with a purpose of better understanding Indige...
Drawing on literature about place-based education and service-learning, as well as three groups* per...
grantor: University of TorontoThis inquiry examines some of the ways in which a woman read...
This paper draws upon research from a Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada study...
Connections between lifelong learning and fiction writing are explored by drawing upon the findings ...
Drawing upon the results of a Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) funde...
Sisters in Crime (SinC) is explored as a unique learning organization dedicated to addressing discri...
Female coterie writing groups have had certain characteristics in common across centuries that can ...
This paper draws upon findings from a research study on the relationship between fiction, citizenshi...
This guide aims to provide some insight into the ways two projects have approached writing with comm...
This study examines women’s engagements with popular romance fiction. Framing genres as sites of par...
This dissertation consists of four micro-case studies of intersectional feminist college students’ e...
This piece discusses the integration of women writers into a “Great Books” curriculum at a public un...
This interview-intensive interpretive study explores the stories of seven first-year women enrolled ...
Relationships have served as a cornerstone to feminist research in community-based research and serv...
This Master's thesis is an Indigenous research project with a purpose of better understanding Indige...
Drawing on literature about place-based education and service-learning, as well as three groups* per...
grantor: University of TorontoThis inquiry examines some of the ways in which a woman read...