Neaderhiser, Stephen E., editorUtah State University Press, publisher2022-12-152022-12-152022https://hdl.handle.net/10217/235902Includes bibliographical references and index.Writing the Classroom explores faculty's use of pedagogical documents to establish classroom expectations and schedules as well as articulate professional identities performed by faculty teachers inside and outside the classroom, arguing that genres like prompts, proposals, statements, and policy documents are fundamental in constructing the broader pedagogical enterprise within academia.--Provided by publisher.The syllabus: a gateway to or gatekeeper of the profession / Michael Albright -- Feminist writing assignments: enacting pedagogy through classroom genres / Kate Navickas -- Patterns, negotiations, and ideologies: contract grading as genre / Virginia M. Schwarz -- Evaluative feedback genres: sites for exploring writing teacher development / Jessica Rivera-Mueller -- Occlusion in a classroom genre set: assessing assignment sheets and grading rubrics / Dustin Morris and Lindsay Clark -- "But nobody looks at these!": making the rhetorical case for syllabi of record / Amy Ferdinandt Stolley and Christopher Toth -- "Is it in the handbook?": the role of departmental teaching handbooks in developing pedagogical identity / Dana Comi -- "Am I covered for that?": examining the "work" of policy documents in the first-year course / Mark A. Hannah and Christina Saidy -- Recommendation, requirement, and reproduction: sanctioned uptake in classroom accessibility statements / Matt Dowell -- Written in homely discourse: a case study of intellectual and institutional identity in teaching genres / Megan Schoen, Jim Nugent, Cindy Mooty, and Lori Ostergaard -- Performing reflection in institutional contexts: a genre approach to compelled reflective writing / Lesley Erin Bartlett -- Genre anxiety: the pedagogical, political, and emotional work of making a certificate / Laura R. Micciche and Lora Arduser -- Pedagogical identity in a digital world: challenge and collaboration in the course proposal genre / Cynthia Pengilly -- Toward the learning to teach statement / Megan Knight and Kate Nesbit -- COGs in the pedagogical machine: the structuration, rhetorical situations, and perigenres surrounding classroom observation guidelines / Zack K. De Piero -- Outcomes statements as meta-genres: the (transformative) role of outcomes statements in program revision / Logan Bearden.born digitalbooksengCopyright and other restrictions may apply. User is responsible for compliance with all applicable laws. For information about copyright law, please see https://libguides.colostate.edu/copyright.All rights reserved. User is responsible for compliance. Please contact University Press of Colorado at https://upcolorado.com/our-books/rights-and-permissions for use information.Education, Higher -- CurriculaCollege teachingEnglish language -- Rhetoric -- Study and teaching (Higher)Literary form -- Study and teaching (Higher)Writing the classroom: pedagogical documents as rhetorical genresTextAccess is limited to the Adams State University, Colorado State University, Colorado State University Pueblo, Community College of Denver, Fort Lewis College, Metropolitan State University Denver, Regis University, University of Alaska Fairbanks, University of Colorado Boulder, University of Colorado Colorado Springs, University of Colorado Denver, University of Denver, University of Northern Colorado, University of Wyoming, Utah State University and Western Colorado University communities only.