Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Recent Posts
    • Attending Computers and Writing 2025? Be a Session Reviewer! 
    • Charisse Iglesias: Community Engagement Beyond Academia
    • Addison Kliewer – Bridging Academia and Industry with Technical Writing Mastery
    • Philosophy of Technology in Rhetoric and Writing Studies
    • Call for Blog Carnival 23: Digital Circulation in Rhetoric and Writing Studies
    • Introduction to Robert Beck
    • Introduction to Alex Mashny
    • Introduction to Marie Pruitt
    RSS Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Digital Rhetoric Collaborative
    • Home
    • Conversations
      • Blog Carnivals
      • DRC Talk Series
      • Hack & Yack
      • DRC Wiki
    • Reviews
      • CCCC Reviews
        • 2023 CCCC Reviews
        • 2022 CCCC Reviews
        • 2021 CCCC Reviews
        • 2019 CCCC Reviews
      • C&W Reviews
        • 2022 C&W Reviews
        • 2019 C&W Reviews
        • 2018 C&W Reviews
        • 2017 C&W Reviews
        • 2016 C&W Reviews
        • 2015 C&W Reviews
        • 2014 C&W Reviews
        • 2013 C&W Reviews
        • 2012 C&W Reviews
      • MLA Reviews
        • 2019 MLA Reviews
        • 2014 MLA Reviews
        • 2013 MLA Reviews
      • Other Reviews
        • 2018 Watson Reviews
        • 2017 Feminisms & Rhetorics
        • 2017 GPACW
        • 2016 Watson Reviews
        • 2015 IDRS Reviews
      • Webtext of the Month
    • Teaching Materials
      • Syllabus Repository
      • Teaching & Learning Materials (TLM) Collection
    • Books
      • Memetic Rhetorics
      • Beyond the Makerspace
      • Video Scholarship and Screen Composing
      • 100 Years of New Media Pedagogy
      • Writing Workflows
      • Rhetorical Code Studies
      • Developing Writers in Higher Education
      • Sites of Translation
      • Rhizcomics
      • Making Space
      • Digital Samaritans
      • DRC Book Prize
      • Submit a Book Proposal
    • DRC Fellow Projects
    • About
      • Advisory Board
      • Graduate Fellows
    Digital Rhetoric Collaborative

    Get Involved with the DRC at CCCC 2020! [Update: Cancelled]

    0
    By Jathan Day on March 2, 2020 Other Reviews

    UPDATE: Due to the health and safety concerns around COVID-19, the CCCC Executive Committee has cancelled this year’s conference, which means we will not be requesting session reviewers after all. We would like to thank all who volunteered to review a session nevertheless, and we welcome you to sign up again to review sessions for Computers & Writing or for another future conference. Stay tuned for more information in the coming months.

    Thank you for your understanding. We wish you and yours well during these uncertain times.

    The Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative is seeking reviewers for CCCC 2020. We are particularly interested in conference reviews relating to digital rhetoric. Reviews are published on the DRC website to help facilitate conversations about conference sessions among attendees and others who may not have been present at the conference.

    If you would like to be a reviewer for a CCCC 2020 session, please see this Google Sheet to sign up for a session to review.

    Reviews can be composed in written text (500-1500 words) or in any other appropriate media as long as the information can be received by a user in 3-5 minutes. Your review should include an overview of the session, but should also address key implications, stakes, or take-away points. Please also make sure that if you offer relevant critique in your review, you do so in a collegial and constructive manner. We may edit received reviews or send reviews back for revision, if necessary. Feel free to refer to the CCCC 2019 reviews as models.

    Reviews due: Friday, April 10, 2020

    Reviewers will receive an email close to the conference dates with information about the submission process. If you have any questions or would like more information, you can contact the DRC fellows at DRCfellows@umich.edu.

    Digital Rhetoric Sessions of Interest

    We are particularly interested in reviews of sessions focused on digital rhetoric and have curated a list of such sessions, though you can propose another session to review.

    Thursday 10:30-11:45am

    • A.32 Double-Tap to Like: Availability, Kairos, and Invention in the Instagram Classroom – Mitchell Room (Hilton)
    • A.33 (Re)Shaping Disciplinary Boundaries, Bodies, and Power – Walker Room (Hilton)
    • A.34 Disrupting Publishing Commonplaces: Creating the Next Generation of Writing and Rhetoric Scholars Wright – Ballroom A (Hilton)

    Thursday 12:15-1:30 p.m.

    • B.08 Posthumanist Praxis: Challenging Stories of Pedagogy and Place – 102 D (Wisconsin Center)
    • B.28 Re-Thinking Audience in Multilingual, Translingual, and Digital Composition Pedagogy – 203 E (Wisconsin Center)
    • B.32 Writing with Recorded Voices and Soundwaves: Reconsidering Literacy through Podcast-Making – Mitchell Room (Hilton)
    • B.33 Designing Accessible Online Writing Experiences – Walker Room (Hilton)
    • B.43 Tracing Transfer: Reports of Transfer in Multimodal, Multilingual, and Writing Center Contexts – Executive Ballroom B (Hyatt)

    Thursday 1:45-3:00 p.m.

    • C.25 Toward a Feminist Commonplace: Literacies of Digital Activism, Menstruation, and Shame-  203 B (Wisconsin Center)
    • C.31 Exploring Eco-Cognitive Approaches to Digital Composition: A Report and Interactive Data Analysis Session – Executive Ballroom D (Hyatt)
    • C.32 Critical Making in Composition Studies – Mitchell Room (Hilton)
    • C.33 Publics, Resistance, and Expertise in Digital Spaces – Walker Room (Hilton)
    • C.43 Archival Commonplaces and Student Writers: The Student as Researcher and as Historical Subject – Executive Ballroom B (Hyatt)
    • C.44 Researching Rhetorical Commonplaces in Health – Executive Ballroom C (Hyatt)

    Thursday 3:15-4:30 p.m.

    • D.21 The Pedagogy of Commonplaces: Invention and Anamnesis in User Data and Consent in Data Protection Policy- 202 C (Wisconsin Center)

    Thursday, 3:15–4:30 p.m.

    • D.23 Exploring Commonplaces in Scientific and Environmental Discourse: Pedagogy and Public Communication in Contested Times- 202 E (Wisconsin Center)
    • D.32 Programmed Literacies: Reconceptualizing Commonplaces of Writing Platforms and Language- Mitchell Room (Hilton)
    • D.33 Constructing Ethos Online: Social Media, Social Cataloguing Sites, and Disciplinary Listservs- Walker Room (Hilton)

    Thursday, 4:45–6:00 p.m.

    • E.12 Valuing Linguistic Diversity – 103 C (Wisconsin Center)
    • E.21 From Metaphor to Material: Disrupting Commonplace Assumptions about Voice – 202 C (Wisconsin Center)
    • E.32 Disability Commonplaces in Online Activism, Health Communities, and Apps – Walker Room (Hilton)
    • E.34 A Discussion of Three Digital Writing Commonplaces in Six Writing Programs: Assignments, Cross-Campus Collaborations, and Badass WPAs – Wright Ballroom B (Hilton)
    • E.31 Revisiting Commonplaces in Digital Rhetoric -Mitchell Room (Hilton)

    Friday, 8:00–9:15 a.m. 

    • F.03 Complicating Commonplaces of Digitalness in Gen Z Writers and Writing – 101 C (Wisconsin Center)
    • F.23  Questioning the Commonplaces of Digital Aggression: New Approaches for Researching and Teaching Productive Response to Online Hate Speech and Harassment – 202 E (Wisconsin Center)
    • F.24  Reconsidering Commonplaces of Reading: A Social Approach Using Digital Annotation – 203 A (Wisconsin Center)
    • F.25  Coding Rhetorics and Digital Composing – 203 B (Wisconsin Center)
    • F.26 Reverberations: Emergent Commonplaces in Rhetorical Studies of Sound – 203 C (Wisconsin Center)

    Friday, 9:30–10:45 a.m.

    • G.01 Creating a Public, Community-Driven Writing Program Digital Archive – 101 A (Wisconsin Center)
    • G.15 Cultivating Conditions for Effective Online Writing Pedagogy – 201 A (Wisconsin Center)
    • G.23  Storytelling in Motion: Rhetorical Approaches to Filmmaking in the Classroom and Communities- 202 E (Wisconsin Center)
    • G.24 Emerging Commonplaces in Digital Literacies: Ethical Entanglements among Humans, Bots, and Trolls – 203 A (Wisconsin Center)
    • G.25 Selves and Competencies in Digital Composing – 203 B (Wisconsin Center)

    Friday, 12:30–1:45 p.m. 

    • I.24  Writing on the Move: Unsettling Commonplaces through Transliteracies – 203 A (Wisconsin Center)
    • I.25  Digital Rhetorics and Resistant Pedagogies: Open-Access Journals, Inclusivity, and Justice – 203 B (Wisconsin Center)

    Friday, 2:00–3:15 p.m. 

    • J.01 Revealing Values and Commonplaces around Digital Rhetorical Practices and Communities – 101 A (Wisconsin Center)
    • J.10 Preserving Local Stories through Community Partnerships – 103 A (Wisconsin Center)
    • J.11 Recovering and Reclaiming Asian/Asian American “Traits” in Rhetoric and Writing – 103 B (Wisconsin Center)
    • J.24 #Digital Commonplaces: Collision as Commentary – 203 A (Wisconsin Center)

    Saturday, 8:00–9:15 a.m. 

    • K.02 Uncommon Places: The Recording Studio as Compositional Space – 101 B (Wisconsin Center)
    • K.16 Multimodal Approaches to Teacher Feedback: How Digital Technology Can Transform a Cherished Commonplace – 201 B (Wisconsin Center)
    • K.22 Viral Knowledge-Making: Circulation, Identities, and Digital Commonplaces – 202 D (Wisconsin Center)
    • K.23 Teaching (Digital) Ethics in Shared and Streamed Commonplaces – 202 E (Wisconsin Center)
    • K.34 Challenging Commonplace Assumptions in Writing Research – Wright Ballroom B (Hilton)

    Saturday, 9:30–10:45 a.m. 

    • L.07 Transcending Commonplace Academic Discourse in Community Partnerships – 102 C (Wisconsin Center)
    • L.10 Disrupting Digital Commonplaces: Engaging Student Challenges and Anxieties in Digital Composing – 103 A (Wisconsin Center)
    • L.22  What They Do in the Shadows: Audience, Interpretation, and Identity in Internet Memes – 202 D (Wisconsin Center)
    • L.23  Using Digital Technologies to Disrupt—or Not— Classroom Practices – 202 E (Wisconsin Center)
    • L.28  The Commonplaces of Access and Accessibility in Our Programs: Local Rhetorics of Inclusion and Their Tacit Assumptions – 203 E (Wisconsin Center)
    • L.39 Three Approaches to Digitality: Curriculum, Pedagogy, and Online Writing Centers – Saturday, 11:00 a.m.–12:15 p.m.

    Saturday, 11:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.

    • M.12 Using Digital and Multimodal Composing to Foster Classroom Inclusivity – 103 C (Wisconsin Center)
    • M.16 Critical Re ections on Critical Pedagogies: Pushing Boundaries and Expanding Our Notions of Critical Pedagogy in the Composition Classroom – 201 B (Wisconsin Center)
    • M.22 Situating a “New” Kairos in Online Communications: Analyzing the Opportune Moment in Digital Network Conversations – 202 D (Wisconsin Center)
    • M.23 Toward Greater Inclusivity in Digital Projects and Online Teaching – 202 E (Wisconsin Center)
    • M.36 Resisting Commonplaces, Shifting Positionalities – Regency Ballroom (Hilton)

    Saturday, 12:30–1:45 p.m. 

    • N.22 Shifting Big Data Commonplaces: Text Mining Methodologies and Data Analytics for Social Good – 202 D (Wisconsin Center)
    • N.23 TechnoMaterial Environments: Distributed Agency, Information Flows, and Technological Consumption – 202 E (Wisconsin Center)

    Author

    • Jathan Day
      Jathan Day

      Jathan Day is the Graduate Administrative and Editorial Associate for the DRC. He is a PhD candidate in the Joint Program in English and Education at the University of Michigan. Jathan's research interests include course management systems, digital literacies, online pedagogy, disability studies, and reading practices.

      View all posts
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Recent Posts
    By Alyse CampbellMay 6, 20250

    Attending Computers and Writing 2025? Be a Session Reviewer! 

    By Thais Rodrigues Cons, Toluwani OdedeyiApril 25, 20250

    Charisse Iglesias: Community Engagement Beyond Academia

    By Toluwani Odedeyi, Thais Rodrigues ConsMarch 31, 20250

    Addison Kliewer – Bridging Academia and Industry with Technical Writing Mastery

    By Mehdi MohammadiFebruary 11, 20250

    Philosophy of Technology in Rhetoric and Writing Studies

    By Marie Pruitt, Robert Beck, Alex MashnyFebruary 4, 20250

    Call for Blog Carnival 23: Digital Circulation in Rhetoric and Writing Studies

    Digital Rhetoric Collaborative | Gayle Morris Sweetland Center for Writing | University of Michigan

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.