2010
DOI: 10.1080/10572252.2010.481530
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The Province of Sophists: An Argument for Academic Homelessness

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Cited by 15 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…These multiple interests in teaching, practice, and research are inherent to an interdisciplinary field such as ours, and as Harlow (2010) argues, our homelessness and mediation abilities may be our greatest disciplinary strengths. Growing attention and respect for empirical pedagogical scholarship through SoTL presents professional communication teacher-scholars with excellent opportunities via new research agendas within and across our organizations and more support for our arguments for disciplinary respect.…”
Section: Parallel Challenges and A Search For "Home"mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…These multiple interests in teaching, practice, and research are inherent to an interdisciplinary field such as ours, and as Harlow (2010) argues, our homelessness and mediation abilities may be our greatest disciplinary strengths. Growing attention and respect for empirical pedagogical scholarship through SoTL presents professional communication teacher-scholars with excellent opportunities via new research agendas within and across our organizations and more support for our arguments for disciplinary respect.…”
Section: Parallel Challenges and A Search For "Home"mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Part of the tension felt across professional communication as a discipline comes from a seeming lack of a natural academic home for our interdisciplinary programs and classes. Harlow (2010) points to the "assumption that in academe, homelessness indicates disciplinary weakness and lack of institutional value" (p. 319). ABC members report being housed in English departments and business schools, as well as communication schools to a lesser extent, and those in business schools report being housed in departments such as business education and management (Cyphert, 2009).…”
Section: Parallel Challenges and A Search For "Home"mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As TPCs broaden their response to the field’s calls for conducting interdisciplinary research, new implications about TPCs’ professional status emerge. Prior research has documented the impact of various factors on the achievement of professional status (Kynell-Hunt & Savage, 2003, 2004) such as the challenges TPCs face when demonstrating their value to organizational work (Johnson-Eilola, 1996; Mead, 1998; Redish, 1995), the assumedly support nature of TPCs’ work (Paretti, McNair, & Holloway-Attaway, 2007; Zachry et al., 2001), the location or placement of a program’s disciplinary home (Maylath, Grabill, Gurak, 2010; Yeats & Thompson, 2010) or even lack thereof (Harlow, 2010), and the variety and inconsistency of names used to identify TPCs and their work (Johnson-Eilola, 1996; Moore & Kreth, 2005; Slack, Miller, & Doak, 1993). These issues persist today, but when assessed in the context of interdisciplinary research, the quality of those issues undergoes a temporal and agential shift.…”
Section: Indirectly Speaking To the Challenge(s) Of Access In Interdimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many scholars have recognized technical communication’s long history of grappling with the visibility of its work and its value to other fields and professions (Bekins & Williams, 2006; Diehl, Grabill, & Hart-Davidson, 2008; Harlow, 2010; Hart & Conklin, 2006; Hart-Davidson, 2001; Sullivan, Martin, & Anderson, 2003). As M. Ann Brady and Joanna Schreiber (2013) describe, technical communication’s relative invisibility in the workplace has been “an obstacle for status and success for many years” (p. 344).…”
Section: Visibility and Its Problemsmentioning
confidence: 99%