Engaging Ideas. John C. Bean

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second edition in 2011. In preparing this third edition of Engaging Ideas, we have tried to incorporate ideas and examples from the following recent developments in scholarship, pedagogy, and teaching practices.

      Field‐Specific Scholarship in Writing and Pedagogy

      When we began writing the manuscript for the third edition, ResearchGate had identified nearly seven hundred citations of Engaging Ideas in the pedagogical literature across the disciplines. Many of these citations came from articles in discipline‐specific pedagogical journals such as Journal of Economic Education, Teaching and Learning in Nursing, The American Biology Teacher, Communicating Science, Journal of Management Education, Physics Review, and Physics Education Research. Many additional citations came from general pedagogical journals associated with the scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL) and from journals in writing studies. ResearchGate's technology made it possible for us to assemble a rich bibliography of these pedagogical resources across the disciplines—resources that might otherwise be known just in their specialized fields. The majority of these sources make significant disciplinary contributions to writing across the curriculum or other active learning pedagogies. Throughout the third edition, we draw on this body of research for ideas and examples.

      The “Writing about Writing/Transfer of Knowledge” Movement in Writing Studies

      Use of Metacognition and Reflection for Self‐Assessment and Improved Peer Review

      Another recent development in writing studies has been scholarship across the disciplines showing the efficacy of reflective writing for increasing subject matter learning and for promoting mindful awareness of one's thinking processes while writing or reading. By encouraging metacognition, reflective writing can increase students' skills at self‐assessing their own drafts in progress and provide constructive help to classmates during peer review. The influence of this scholarship can be seen throughout the third edition, especially in our examples of reflective assignments from across the disciplines and in Dan's own experiences using reflections, self‐assessment, and peer review in his writing courses. Chapter 11, new to this edition, focuses explicitly on self‐assessment and peer review.

      Emergence of a Translingualist Approach to Diversity in Language Practices, Media, and Genres

      In 2011, writing studies scholars Bruce Horner, Min‐Zhan Lu, Jacqueline Jones Royster, and John Trimbur published a landmark article entitled “Language Difference in Writing: Toward a Translingual Approach.” As Horner and colleagues explain, a translingual approach “applaud[s] efforts to increase students' fluency in as many languages and varieties of language as possible” (307). Instead of trying to eradicate “error” (often seen as deviations from Standard edited English), a translingual approach invites students to identify rhetorical contexts where it might be effective to break the conventions of Standard English or otherwise to draw on linguistic resources from other dialects or languages.

      It should be noted that we wrote the manuscript for the third edition during the Black Lives Matter protests against police brutality set inside the COVID‐19 lockdown and the approaching 2020 elections. At this time, many teachers, who have long valued diversity and social justice, were forced again to acknowledge white privilege and confront the biases of former practices. In this third edition, the influence of translingualism can be most noticed in our revision of the chapter on grammar and sentence editing. The translingual approach can also be felt in our examples throughout, which feature a wider range of ethnicities, media, genres, and audiences.

      Growing Interest in Alternatives to Traditional Grading

      Expanding Affordances of Classroom Technology and Social Media

      Since the second edition was published in 2011 there has been rapid growth in instructional technology, cell phone apps, multimedia web platforms, and social media affordances. Here Dan's expertise has been crucial. At the time of his retirement from teaching, John was still collecting stapled copies of student papers and cursing the disappearance of opaque projectors. Luckily for the third edition, Dan is at home with classroom technology, social media, and the various places where pedagogy and technology intersect. Readers will appreciate Dan's contributions throughout in our updated references to technology ranging from clickers in the classroom to conducting small‐group discussions on Zoom.

      Given this background on new scholarship and evolving teaching practices, we can now provide a succinct description of what is new in the third edition:

       A new chapter (chapter 11) on using self‐assessment, reflection, and peer review to promote revision. This new chapter reviews the scholarship on reflection and peer review and shows how instructors can shift some of the responsibility for responding to student writing from themselves onto students.

       A new chapter (chapter 16) on alternatives to traditional grading. This chapter reviews long‐standing critiques of traditional grading in pedagogical scholarship and shows how portfolios and contract grading can be viable alternatives for overcoming inequities and increasing students' motivation,

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