Year in Review: AY 16-17

In our chapter’s short two years of existence (Est. 5/7/15), we have done a lot. Thanks to your ideas and service, we have had a very successful year. Check it out:

Conferences

Dr. Carly Woods presents to a packed house at Terps Talk Politics.

We held two conferences this past year. In the fall, Terps Talk Politics brought community members together to listen to UMD rhetorical scholars present and lead discussions on their research as it related to the 2016 presidential campaign. We were funded in total by the University of Maryland Pepsi Enhancement Fund. Several active members helped to both coordinate and participate in the event.

In the spring, we hosted our first Graduate Archival Symposium. Fifteen graduate students from UMD, Penn State, Carnegie Mellon, and Indiana University of Pennsylvania attended the symposium.

Graduate Archival Symposium participants enjoying the “Archives in Action” tour led by Hornbake Library Special Collections librarians.

Faculty from UMD’s Communication and English Departments led the plenary and workshop sessions. We were co-sponsored by the University of Maryland Graduate Student Government (GSG), received an RSA Special Event award, and were partially funded through Dr. Michelle Murray Yang’s research and scholarship award.

Professional Development, an awesome undergrad, and swag

Other committees remained active. Our professional and scholarly development committee planned a fall reading group that met to discuss the most recent issues of Rhetoric Society Quarterly. In the spring, Dr. Kristy Maddux invited us to read and discuss materials by/with two visiting scholars, Dr. Jensen and Dr. Terrill.

Ms. Emily Schaefer accepted the 2017 Undergraduate Rhetorical Scholar Award.

Our undergraduate rhetoric committee presented Communication Department graduating senior Emily Schaefer with the Undergraduate Rhetorical Scholar Award for her outstanding essay titled “Breaking Barriers, Building Pipelines: Discussing the Impact of the Dakota Access Pipeline with Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard (D-HI).” The committee was impressed with Emily’s scholarly insight, rigorous research, and writing quality.

The workshops committee booked local conference presentation extraordinaire Thomas McCloskey for a G.I.F.T.S. proposal workshop in March.

And we finally got some sweet, sweet, chapter swag. We have extras in case you missed the ordering window!

Digital Digital Get Down

Beyond these activities, we maintained an active online presence. We continued to provide updated resources such as conference announcements and deadlines on the blog and some featured content written by members. We regularly engaged with the Maryland and broader #teamrhetoric communities through our Twitter and Facebook pages.

Moving forward

There are certainly goals we did not achieve and areas for improvement. For example, we did not plan any fundraisers, fell behind on member spotlights, never finished the pedagogy resource, and did not follow through on undergraduate scholar mentoring. And most of the labor for our successful projects was divided among very few active members.

When we drafted the constitution in 2015, we knew some goals were lofty. For that reason, the next executive board can decide how to prioritize and where to focus. I have proposed some amendments to our constitution and bylaws that may potentially lessen the force of our original vision, but more may need to be done to revise the document to reflect the desires and time constraints of our current members. These amendments and a ballot for the next executive board will be heading your way soon.

I am still hopeful for what is to come with our Maryland graduate student chapter of RSA. Have a restful, productive, and happy summer, #teamrhetoric!

-Becca

 

Register for Archival Symposium, April 13 – 15, College Park, MD

Cheló̱na RSA, the University of Maryland’s graduate student chapter of the Rhetoric Society of America, is thrilled to announce the creation of the Cheló̱na RSA Archival Symposium, hosted at the University of Maryland, College Park from Thursday, April 13 to Saturday, April 15.

This three-day event aims to prepare graduate students for archival research, including a trip to one of the many archives in the Washington, D.C. metro area. Graduate students with an interest in archival research will have the opportunity to learn from UMD archivists and experienced faculty members about archival research. While graduate students often recognize departmental or disciplinary expectations to conduct archival research, they frequently lack the training or opportunity to do so. This symposium aims to help close this gap and empower students in their own research areas.

This symposium will include paneled talks with faculty and archivists, as well as a working trip to an archive of the participants’ choice in the Washington, D.C. area. Participants will be able to use public transportation from the University of Maryland. The symposium will close with facilitated roundtable discussions about the opportunities, challenges, and specific research agendas associated with archival research.

Cheló̱na RSA intends this symposium to be an interdisciplinary place where students from across the university are welcomed to learn, explore, and share their work with each other in a collaborative atmosphere. For those who are new to archival research (as many graduate students are) entering the archive can be a daunting task, while those who have sat long hours in reading rooms can attest to the challenges inherent in archival work. With Washington, D.C. as the picturesque backdrop for this meeting of the minds, the Cheló̱na RSA Archival Symposium invites collaboration while supporting a future generation of scholars in their quest for archival literacy.

The symposium will be capped at 30 participants to facilitate a productive, working environment. Interested applicants need to complete the Cheló̱na RSA Archives Symposium Application Form (Name, Institutional information, brief research statement, and archival interest) by 5:00pm Wednesday, March 15. Accepted applicants will be notified by Monday, March 20.
Please direct questions to the Conference Committee Chair, Jaclyn Bruner (jbruner@umd.edu).

Click here to view the symposium schedule.

Member Spotlight – December

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Our third member spotlight of 2016 is founding member and PhD Candidate in Rhetoric and Political Culture (COMM) Kim Hannah-Prater.

My name is Kim Hannah-Prater. I’m a doctoral candidate in communication, wkim-candid-photoith a research focus on political satire and media studies. Over the past few years, I’ve taught public speaking, rhetorical analysis, and gendered communication. One reason I decided to study at UMD is because of the proximity to many historical and contemporary settings for rhetoric and because of the wonderful research done by scholars in my department. Since living here, I’ve visited Gettysburg to see the location where Lincoln delivered his famous address, and I stopped by Lincoln Park in DC to see the Freedmen’s Memorial that Frederick Douglass so eloquently critiqued.

I have served Cheló̱na RSA as our publicity chair since the 2015-2016 academic year. It was a pleasure to live tweet our organization’s Terps Talk Politics symposium in October 2016, and I have also enjoyed sharing news relevant to the membership. Also, I am a graduate student senator for University Senate and serve on the student affairs committee. I look forward to interacting with other Cheló̱na RSA members this spring.
Thank you, Kim, for your service to our organization and contributions to the field of rhetoric!

Are students ready for college?

As graduate students at Maryland, a large part of our identity comes from being teachers. We strive to provide respectful and inclusive classroom environments. We set high expectations for our undergraduate students. But sometimes it seems as though our students are less ready for the rigor of collegiate academics than they should be. It got us thinking – what can we do about it? Are our students ready for college?

In 2013, former high school educator Kenneth Bernstein wrote an op-ed in the Washington Post, “A warning to college profs from a high school teacher.” He explains his attempts to navigate the standards and expectations, as well as his decision to step away from teaching.

He writes: “I would like to believe that I prepared them to think more critically and to present cogent arguments, but I could not simultaneously prepare them to do well on that portion of the test and teach them to write in a fashion that would properly serve them at higher levels of education.”

But he feels the structure of tests, even tests like the AP (Advanced Placement), made it impossible. He pleads with college instructors not to blame K-12 educators for a student’s lack of preparedness for the college environment. He is dismayed and looking to advocate for a better way forward.

English: Digital Humanities Winter Institute Editathon (2013), Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

English: Digital Humanities Winter Institute Editathon (2013), Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

And here’s where we come in:

What do we do as instructors if we know our students are not, in Berstein’s words, prepared “for the kind of intellectual work that you [we] have every right to expect of them?”

Last spring, a handful of our members attended a workshop hosted by the Maryland Teaching and Learning Transformation Center (TLTC) about teaching your students how to learn. Programs like this focus on student-centered strategies that are ultimately helpful, but only mask the symptoms and don’t get to the root of the problem.

We think the way forward can be an emphasis on rhetorical education, both at the K-12 level and in the collegiate setting. Rhetorical education stresses what Bernstein says he wanted to do, but wasn’t able to in his classroom.

A rhetorical education can blend classical theory with contemporary culture, teach students how to approach their audience, advance cogent arguments, and express themselves and their opinions in a manner that promotes growth, not division. Students need to be able to advance and defend positions, to understand when someone else is doing the same, and employ the tenets of criticism to judge whether or not an argument will work.

We think that Bernstein is right to worry, but that a curriculum recommitted to a rhetorical education can benefit all students in the long run.

Member Spotlight – September

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As we enter our second year of official RSA graduate chapter-hood, we want to begin spotlighting the fantastic people we have as members. Our members conduct important research, inspire undergraduates, and leadMe and a King fascinating lives outside of their academic pursuits. Our first member spotlight is second-term Vice President and founding member, Annie Laurie Nichols (COMM, PhD Candidate).

When I moved abroad I had a very small suitcase, so I only took three books with me:

  • I love to wander (I’ve visited 15 countries and counting!), but also enjoy the comforts of a good day at home eating seed cake (yeah, I’m a foodie), so I brought The Hobbit, by J.R.R. Tolkien. Also I’m a nerd.
  • To stay grounded, I try to appreciate the beauty in everyday things, so I brought the poignant, whimsical Translations from the Poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke.
  • Finally, I’m fascinated by how we make meaning together, so I brought my favorite book of rhetorical theory: Language as Symbolic Action, by Kenneth Burke.

If you were moving to another continent with a small suitcase and could only bring three books, what would you bring?

Thank you, Annie Laurie, for your service, dedication, and contributions to our organization.

Terps Talk Politics: Symposium on the 2016 Presidential Election

Register for Terps Talk Politics!

The 2016 Presidential Election has brought us Hillary Clinton’s nomination as the first woman candidate for a major party, Donald Trump’s unexpected success, and a wealth of things to discuss!

As such important civic and democratic exercises, elections are vital to understanding and reflecting on the significance of communicative and rhetorical actions. Fortunately, there are many scholars at the University of Maryland and the surrounding region whose research centers on these very important topics! 

Chelóna RSA is proud to host an exciting symposium-style workshop for the University of Maryland campus community the evening of October 27th, 2016 in Francis Scott Key Hall.

This event is sponsored by the University of Maryland Pepsi Enhancement Fund and presented in coordination with the Department of Communication’s Oral Communication Center (OCC). The keynote address will be delivered by Dr. Leticia Bode, assistant professor of political communication and new media at Georgetown University. In addition to Dr. Bode’s address, Terps Talk Politics will feature simultaneous panel presentations and discussions throughout the event.

Hors d’oeuvres and souvenirs will be provided for all attendees.

Admission to this event is completely free, though we do require attendees to register at this link. Once you’re registered, please RSVP on Facebook and share the event with your friends and colleagues! We look forward to a rhetorical discussion of the 2016 Presidential Election with you!

Full program details:

Session 1: 5:00-5:25pm

Key 0103: “The Gender Politics of the 2016 Presidential Debates,” Dr. Carly Woods (COMM)

Key 0120: “Why did Mr. Khizer Khan’s Speech at the DNC go viral?,” Dr. Kathleen Kendall and Dr. Sahar Khamis (COMM)

Session 2: 5:30-5:55pm

Key 0103: “Corpus Approaches to Analyzing Rhetorical Commonplaces in Primary Speeches,” Cameron Mozafari (English)

Key 0120: “Children are Watching”: Political Media Literacy in the 2016 Presidential Election, Thomas McCloskey (COMM)

Session 3: 6:00-6:25pm

Key 0103: “Trump, Twitter, and Public Argument,” Dr. Damien Pfister (COMM)

Key 0120: “’Just so you understand, OK?’: Donald Trump’s Interactive Rhetoric,” Dr. Linda Coleman (English)

Keynote Speaker, Dr. Leticia Bode: 6:30-7:30pm, Key 0106

 Session 4: 7:35-8:00pm

 Key 0103: “Donald Trump: The Orange Herring,” Hagar Attia and Lauren Hunter (COMM)

Key 0120: “’What are you afraid of?’: Strategic, Civic, and Moral Dimensions of Non-Participation in Presidential Campaign Debate,” Taylor Hahn (JHU) and Jade Olson (COMM)

Key 0106: “’Good news, we’re all moving to Canada’: The 2016 Presidential Election and Political Satire,” Kim Hannah-Prater (COMM)

Session 5: 8:05-8:30pm

 Key 0103: “Fear and Loathing in New Hampshire,” Devin Scott, Katie Brown, and Will Howell (COMM)

Key 0120:“Campaign Rhetoric in the Digital Age,” Dr. Sarah Oates (Journalism)

Key 0106: Presentation of PARCS, Presidential Advertising White Paper: Campaign 2016

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Critical Thinking & the Undergrad Rhetoric Course: Teaching Stasis Theory

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Post by Cheló̱na RSA president, Rebecca Alt

Students enrolled undergraduate rhetoric courses actively engage with some of the most urgent contemporary public discourses. Whether it is a more general education course, like COMM 200: Critical Thinking and Speaking, or ENGL 296: Reading and Writing Disability, as instructors we expect our students to critically examine public discourses in order to make and contribute arguments of their own. From foreign policy to the economy, to the Purple Line and campus safety, undergraduates in rhetoric courses all take part in various “unending conversations” (Burke, 110-111) about their lives in macro and micro contexts. The hope is that we succeed in teaching them how to participate in these conversations ethically, compassionately, and effectively.

Many students in our classes are fulfilling general education or minor requirements; thus, not all students arrive with the same amount of background knowledge on every, or any, given topic. Though challenging, I believe this is ultimately a productive inequality wherein collaborative reasoning can flourish and our students can build on each other’s strengths. One way to promote this kind of joint reasoning is by teaching a classical rhetorical method: Stasis Theory.

SO WHAT IS STASIS THEORY?

Though the exact origins of stasis theory are contested, it is believed that Aristotle and Hermagoras developed this method of inquiry which was later refined by Cicero, Quintilian, and Hermogenes (Purdue OWL). In the classical era, it was primarily a tool for invention used in forensic settings (Fahnestock & Secor, 1985). Contemporarily, we can think of the stases as a practical way of categorizing arguments or points of contention, ultimately helping a reasoner arrive at a krisis, or a judgment, about a particular issue. (Corbett & Eberly, 2000). The modern system, developed by Fahnestock and Secor, consists of the following questions:

  • Fact – what happened? What do we know about X?
    • Bob saw Dave walking on his property late at night.
    • Bob did not invite Dan to his property.
    • Dave seemed upset.
  • Definition – what is its nature/what can we call it?
    • Trespassing is defined as entering a landowner’s property without permission.
    • Someone who is upset might be hurt.
  • Cause/Consequence (Effect) – how did this happen?/what is at stake?
    • Perhaps Dave was intoxicated.
    • Something might have happened to upset Dave.
    • Dave could have caused property damage or hurt himself.
  • Quality/Value – is X just, fair?
    • Trespassing is against the law; it is wrong.
    • Trespassing is creepy. Drunkenness is creepy.
    • Dave is vulnerable if he is in danger.
  • Procedure/Policy – how should we proceed?
    • Dave should be fined because he was trespassing.
    • Dave should be taken to the hospital for a physical evaluation.

Ideally, the arguer interested in a problem or issue will begin at the primary stasis, fact/conjecture. Then, much like a detective, s/he searchers for information about and interrogates the problem itself. For example, if the College Park police department receives a report about this potential trespassing incident, the officers begin to investigate the “crime scene.” They collect relevant observations, narratives, and expressions in order to piece together what happened (Corbett & Eberly). They draw on surveillance footage, eyewitness accounts, and other clues. Once the police officers establish the facts of the case, they can determine if it was trespassing, or maybe Dan was lost, or even hurt and needed help. Once the definition of the incident is determined, the process of understanding the causes and consequences, quality, and procedures can begin. In any case, the last three levels of stasis are entirely contingent upon the first two. And, like most rhetorical concepts, the consensus or agreement at any level of stasis is field-dependent (Toulmin): contingent upon the context, the audience, and the time.

Any public exigence should be treated the same way. Before one decides whether or not building a wall between the United States and Mexico is the right course of action, s/he must first establish the facts of the case, the nature of the problem (definition), the causes and consequences, and the quality. On this topic, the student of rhetoric conducts academic research, analyzes audience, identifies common assumptions or topoi, and looks for personal stories and anecdotes. Given the facts related to this issue, the qualities ascribed to it, and the stakes, building a wall might not be the best possible course of action. Whatever topics our students work on independently or discuss collaboratively, this “method” should be emphasized.

In our basic oral communication courses, we call this process research. However, I prefer to think of it as investigative invention – students first ask the question, “What do we know about X?” before engaging in the rigorous investigation at the stasis of fact/conjecture. It’s more than “finding sources” to “support your point” – it is about coming to an understanding of the basic aspects of the problem. Chaïm Perelman believed that in an argument situation – with two interlocutors or a speaker and audience – “contact of minds” could be achieved through the establishment of common ground (The New Rhetoric); this “mind contact” was necessary for argumentation to begin. We often take “facts” for granted as just a “part of logos” or “sources,” but the process or dynamis of discovering these facts is a crucial part of rhetorical invention – for Aristotle, for “observing in any given case all the available means of persuasion.”

Deliberation—with oneself or with others—at each level of stasis is an effective method for encouraging our students to engage in more reasoned and ethical judgments in their practical discourse. True to its Latin translation, “stasis” means “stop.” When I explain this concept to my students in the courses I teach, I emphasize how important it is to do just that: stop. Public debates often grow heated, and usually the fastest and loudest one gets the most airtime. But to approach an urgent problem with a mindset that we don’t know everything or that definitions might change and values are field-dependent is to be a more ethically engaged citizen, which is a very important objective of a rhetorical education.


GREAT, SO HOW DO I TEACH STASIS THEORY?

There are a variety of ways to implement this theoretical frame into class meetings on a regular basis. An instructor can plan a dynamic lecture followed by group discussion on a case or cases, or design a more formal Problem-Based Learning Day that requires deeper investigation into an issue (first providing students with the theoretical context of the assignment). Here is a detailed lesson plan with learning outcomes, materials, and procedural details for a Problem-Based Learning Day.


Special thanks to member Cameron Mozafari, who contributed helpful and necessary clarifying information to improve this post.


 

References

Brizee, A. Stasis theory. Purdue Owl. https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/736/1/

Burke, K. (1941). The Philosophy of Literary Form: Studies in Symbolic Action Third Edition. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Corbett, E. P.J., & Eberly, R. A. (2000).  The Elements of Reasoning 2nd Edition. Boston: Allyn & Bacon.

Fahnestock, J., & Secor, M. (1985). Toward a modern version of stasis theory. In C. Knueppper (Ed.), Oldspeak/newspeak: Rhetorical transformation (pp. 217-226). Arlington, TX: NCTE.

Perelman, C., & Olbrechts-Tyteca, L. (1969). The New Rhetoric. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press.

Toulmin, S. (2000).  The Uses of Argument. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

 

 

How to Lesson Plan Active Learning

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Post Author: Annie Laurie Nichols

The spring semester here at Maryland is drawing to a close and summer is fast approaching… the perfect time for our upcoming #rhetoricroadtrip to RSA in Atlanta! But also the perfect time to take a beat and really think about engaging pedagogically with redesigning lesson plans.

With the recent trend toward active learning, many of us have been trying to incorporate more activities into our lessons. But planning an active lesson is not as simple as adding a related activity and stirring. An active lesson plan must still consider how to help students use and master skills and concepts, how this lesson connects to prior and upcoming lessons and continues to build the major arcs of the class, and how projects and theories are scaffolded and modeled. This is quite a lot to think about simultaneously, so I have developed a method of block planning to ensure I incorporate everything into a thoughtful active lesson plan.

I start by asking myself a series of questions:
● What concepts do I want students to learn?
● What skills do I want students to learn/practice?
● What do they have to already know to be able to do/understand these concepts/skills?
● What have they already learned/what do they already know that can help them understand and use these concepts?
● What upcoming material will these skills and concepts help them understand and do?

Then I subdivide the lesson into three blocks. Each block includes an activity and direct engagement with course concepts:

Block 1 (15 min)  Block 2 (15 min) Block 3 (15 min)
Goal 1 Give students an experience that establishes the need for this material Give students a way to analyze communication using the material  Give students a way to apply material and generate new material
Action 1 Listening is Power activity to demonstrate the role of listening in communication Watch a clip from Star Trek where several characters are involved in a negotiation. What kind of listening is each doing? How does that affect the communication?   In groups of 3, read the scenario. You are going to act as consultants to the people in the scenario. How should they change their listening practices? Convince them will solve their problem.
Goal 2 Check comprehension of homework concepts Debrief the analysis and connect to past material Set up need for future material
Action 2 Ask students to give concepts (5 types of listening), definitions, and examples; write on board How does listening fit into what you have learned about negotiation? What kind of listening did you use in the yellow blueberries activity? How would a different kind of listening have changed how the negotiation went? What else was going wrong in the scenario? Your homework is to read about group dynamics, particularly how groupthink develops and can be avoided. As you read, consider how these theories could help the people in the scenario avoid their problem.

The answers to the questions I have asked myself map into these blocks, and are each paired with an activity. I have found this type of lesson planning to be useful across a variety of courses that include active learning. This particular example is for a 50-minute class period (with 5 minutes reserved to take attendance, make announcements, etc.). For a 75-minute class, I add two more blocks. Arranging the class period like this gives the class a good balance between thinking and application, and breaks up the time I am talking with students doing activities. It also makes sure that I don’t skip the vital step of connecting each activity directly to course content in a deliberate and explicit way.

– Annie Laurie