Showing posts with label Internship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Internship. Show all posts

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Internship Opportunities

RI Monthly magazine (12 hours per week required)
Fall, Spring, Summer internships

To Apply: write to them by email (no website info for interns)

cover letter
resume
links to previous work (at least 2 published examples of work, not school papers)

Direct Letters of Inquiry to:
Jamie Coelho
jcoelho@rimonthly.com

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What's News
RIWP

Edible Rhody

Genie McPherson Trevor
genie@ediblerhody.com
www.ediblerhody.com

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Friday, November 12, 2010

Ketter/Hunter

I just finished reading:

Ketter, Jean & Judy Hunter. "Creating a writer's identity on the boundaries of two communities of practice." Writing Selves/Writing Societies: Research from Activity Perspectives. Eds. Charles Bazerman & David R. Russell. Fort Collins, CO: WAC Clearinghouse, 2003. 307-329.

A terrific article which nicely makes the case for the value of an internship for students. Here are the passages which spoke to me, in particular:

"Erin’s story of negotiating the transition between writing for academia and writing for work is unique. But her experience suggests one way in which students might learn about writing in different communities. Erin’s consciousness of her identity as a writer is heightened by her work on the boundaries of two contrasting communities of practice as she thinks about and comes to understand the constraints and freedoms afforded by each community. Her participation in the two communities of practice enhances her understanding of writing as a complex interaction between the writer’s identity and social cultural practices of the community. As do Dias et. al (1999), we see that the ways of learning about writing and the purposes of writing activity in academic and workplace communities of practice can differ, but we learn through this study that Erin benefits more from her participation in each because of her participation in both." (326)

"...our study shows the benefit of providing opportunities for teachers and students to explore how contrasting communities of practice define successful writing activity and how writing activity operates in the cultural and political sphere of each community. Thus, we believe, academic communities of practice should provide students with opportunities to write in non-academic contexts and should encourage students to reflect about and discuss how these non-academic contexts frame writing activity. At the same time, students may benefit from discussing how the academic contexts in which college writing often occurs also affect writing activity. Such discussions should include how writing activity, both in academia and in other contexts, is a means of operating purposively in the world." (327)

Friday, April 2, 2010

Internships (sources)

ILL Request:

Freedman, A. & Adam, C. (2000). Bridging the gap: University-based writing that is more than simulation. In P. Dias & A. Pare (Eds.), Transitions: Writing in academic and workplace settings (pp. 129-144). Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press.

Hill, C.A. & Resnick, L. (1995). Creating opportunities for apprenticeship in writing. In J. Petraglia (Ed.) Reconceiving writing, rethinking writing instruction (pp. 145-158). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.

For more resources, see Beaufort in Research in Composition, p. 236 (top)

Anson, Chris M., and L. Lee Forsberg. "Moving beyond the Aca demic Community: Transitional Stages in Professional Writing," WC 7 (1990): 200-31.