2008
DOI: 10.1215/15314200-2008-005
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The In-House Conference

Abstract: What does faculty development look like if the underlying assumption isn't that the teachers are the problem, an assumption which, according to Margaret Marshall (2004), has guided educational reform throughout American history? What happens to faculty development when it originates in genuine discussion and mutual respect within a program or department? One answer to these questions might be what we in the first-year writing program at Kennesaw State University call the in-house conference.Like much of the ea… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…Importantly, we viewed the workshop as one part of a broader effort to establish a community of practice within our department. Other colleagues who had attended DMAC with us transformed their knowledge, resulting in an in-house technology-focused conference (Daniell, Davis, Stewart, & Taber, 2008) and the edited collection Teachers as Avatars: English Studies in the Digital Age (Davis & Stewart, 2011), both of which involved not only our fellow DMAC participants but also a variety of other departmental colleagues. DMAC was the catalyst for the community building that happened in our department.…”
Section: Applying Lessons Learned: Technology and Pedagogy Workhopsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Importantly, we viewed the workshop as one part of a broader effort to establish a community of practice within our department. Other colleagues who had attended DMAC with us transformed their knowledge, resulting in an in-house technology-focused conference (Daniell, Davis, Stewart, & Taber, 2008) and the edited collection Teachers as Avatars: English Studies in the Digital Age (Davis & Stewart, 2011), both of which involved not only our fellow DMAC participants but also a variety of other departmental colleagues. DMAC was the catalyst for the community building that happened in our department.…”
Section: Applying Lessons Learned: Technology and Pedagogy Workhopsmentioning
confidence: 99%