A Culture of Civic Action: Deliberative Pedagogy for Composition
| dc.contributor.advisor | Shevaun Watson | |
| dc.contributor.committeemember | Rachel Bloom-Pojar | |
| dc.contributor.committeemember | Wiliam Keith | |
| dc.contributor.committeemember | Derek Handley | |
| dc.contributor.committeemember | Jennifer Borda | |
| dc.creator | Sprague, Trevor Colin | |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2025-01-16T18:38:38Z | |
| dc.date.available | 2025-01-16T18:38:38Z | |
| dc.date.issued | 2021-05-01 | |
| dc.description.abstract | Despite rhetoric and composition maintaining a role as a producer of democracy, democratic deliberation has not appeared widely as a pedagogical practice, outside of reinforcing traditional modes of argumentative writing. This dissertation articulates the dispositions and practices for a deliberative pedagogy in composition that supports students’ development of rhetorical understandings of social-political life, actively redresses exclusions and inequities in dominant understandings of democracy, and engages the discipline with a progressive vision of social change. Agency and citizenship are re-theorized as a grounding to this pedagogy, making clear how a wide variety of communicative acts support the processes and aims of public deliberation and constitute the behaviors of democracy as a way of life. Drawing from two semesters of in-class study, I demonstrate how employing deliberation as a method of instruction, as thematic content for class study, and as a technique for classroom management encourages students to recognize and self-consciously frame their day-to-day writing and speaking as democratic action. The major findings include that deliberative pedagogy leads to transformative change in students’ attitudes towards democracy, expands students’ sense of self-efficacy in writing and communicating on public issues, and supports students in exercising reflective, democratic control over the conditions of their education. | |
| dc.identifier.uri | http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/87194 | |
| dc.relation.replaces | https://dc.uwm.edu/etd/2734 | |
| dc.subject | Citizenship | |
| dc.subject | Deliberation | |
| dc.subject | Democracy | |
| dc.subject | Public Discourse | |
| dc.subject | Rhetoric and Composition | |
| dc.subject | Writing | |
| dc.title | A Culture of Civic Action: Deliberative Pedagogy for Composition | |
| dc.type | dissertation | |
| thesis.degree.discipline | English | |
| thesis.degree.grantor | University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee | |
| thesis.degree.name | Doctor of Philosophy |
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