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Academic Bio
Teaching
Projects
An Abbreviated Curriculum Vitae
Education:
PhD Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, Ohio
Rhetoric and
Writing, 1996
Dissertation: The
Immediacy of Rhetoric: Definitions,
Illustrations, and Implications. Alice Calderonello, Director.
MFA Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia
Creative Writing--
Fiction, 1990
Thesis: That Moment of Stillness and Other Stories. Lee
Smith, Director.
BA University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa English Literature, 1988
Publications:
- “Broadcast
Composition : Using Audio Files and Podcasts in an Online Writing Course.”
Computers and Composition Online, Fall 2006.
- “Blogs
as a Tool for Teaching.” The Chronicle of Higher Education.
June 24, 2005. B-33-35.
- "When
Blogging Goes Bad: A Cautionary Tale About Blogs, Emailing Lists,
Discussion, and Interaction." Kairos. 9.1
September 2004.
- Hart-Davidson, Bill; Steven D. Krause, Nick
Carbone, Michael Day, Joel English, Trish Harris, Johndan Johnson-Eilola,
Ted Nellen, Mike Palmquist, Rich Rice, and Rebecca Rickly. “Re:
The Future of Computers and Writing: A Multivocal Textumentary.”
Computers and Composition,21.1, March 2004.147-159.
- Review
of The Flickering Mind: The False Promise of
Technology in the Classroom and How Learning Can be Saved by Todd
Oppenheimer. in Computers and Composition Online, Spring 2004.
- “Where
Do I List This on My CV? Considering the Values of Self-Published Web
Sites.” College Composition and Communication Online.
54.1 September 2002.
- “’Among the Greatest Benefactors of Mankind’:
What the Success of Chalkboards Tells Us About the Future of Computers
in the Classroom.” The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language
Association, 33.2 Spring 2000. 6-16.
- “’Why Should I Use the Web?’ Four
Benefits and Four Drawbacks to Using the World Wide Web as a Pedagogical
Tool for Writing Classes.” Chapter in The Online Writing Teacher.
Michael Day, Rebecca Rickly, and Susan-Marie Harrington, Editors. Cresskill,
NJ: Hampton Press, 2000, 105-126.
- “Teachers Learning (Not Teaching) HTML With
Students: An Experimental Lesson Plan for Introducing Web Authoring
Into Writing Classes.” Writerly/Readerly Texts Special
Issue, Janice Walker and John Barber, Editors. 7. 1, December 1999.
113-126.
- “Cross Dressing the New
Rhetorics: A Modest Metaphor.” Pre/Text (A journal on
rhetorical theory) 16.3-4 (1995), 198-209.
Presentations:
Invited presentations
- “A Blog Talk in Four Parts.” Keynote
address at the 2006 Jacobson Symposium, “Learning and Living in
the Blogosphere.” Creighton University, Omaha, NE. April 1, 2006.
- Panelist on “The Writing Show #5: Writing and the Internet.”
Sponsored by James River Writers, Richmond, VA. July 28,
2005
- "Professors
Who Blog," an online seminar part of "A Short Course in Rhetoric,"
May 22, 2004. Sponsored by Static, Liverpool, UK
Conference presentations, Roundtables, panel discussions
- Content Management Systems and Writing Program Administration:
When Your Website is Not Something You Have, But Something
You Are. Presented at the Conference for College Compositon
and Communication, New York, NY, March 2007.
- Broadcast Composition: Using Podcasts to Build Community and
Connections in Online Writing Classes.” Presented at the
Conference of College Composition and Communication, Chicago, IL, March
2006.
- “Writing Spaces before Computers: How Changes
and Innovations in Paper Technology Changed How We Taught Writing,”
Presented at the Computers and Writing Conference, Honolulu, HI, June
2004.
- “Blogs as Collaborative
Writing Tools: A Modest Experiment,” Presented at the Computers
and Writing Conference, West Layfette, IN, May 2003.
- “Why Weblogs Should (and Shouldn’t) Count
as Scholarship,” Presented at the Conference on College Composition
and Communication, New York City, NY, March 2003.
- “From Quills to Ballpoints: A Selective History
of the Pen and It’s Impact on the Teaching of Writing,”
Presented March 2002 at the Conference on College Composition and Communication,
Chicago, IL
- “Where Do I List This on My CV? Considering the
Value of Self-Published and Maintained Web Sites,” Presented at
the Modern Language Association Conference, New Orleans, LA, December
2001.
- “Practicing the Theory of Writing as a Technology:
An ‘Invention’ Exercise for Computer-Based Writing Classes.”
Presented March 2001, Conference on College Composition and Communication,
Denver, CO
- “’Will the Real Web Site Please Stand Up?’
Testing Credibility While Examining ‘Fake’ and ‘Non-credible’
Web Sites.” Presented at the Computers and Writing Conference,
Muncie, IN, May 2001.
- “The Gaps (Real and Imagined) Between Theory
and Practice: Connecting K-12 Teachers to Computer-based Writing Pedagogy.”
Presented May 2000, Computers and Writing 2000 Conference, Fort Worth,
TX
- “’Natural’ as Chalk, Pens, and Paper:
The Future Possibilities (and Problems) of Computer Technology in the
Teaching of Writing.” Presented November 1999, Midwest Modern
Language Association Conference, Minneapolis, MN
Workshops
- Benninghoff, Steven (Chair), Bill Hart-Davidson, and
Steven D. Krause. “Integrating
Global and Local Control: A Workshop on Cascading Style Sheets,” offered
at the Computers and Writing Conference, Honolulu, HI, June 2004.
- Krause,
Steven D. (Chair), et. al. “Web Design for Composers: A
Workshop for Composition Teachers Who Want to Create Usable Web Sites,” offered
at the Conference on College Composition and Communication, New York
City, NY, March 2003.
Teaching:
Fall 2002 to present: Associate Professor, Department
of English Language and Literature, Eastern Michigan University
Fall 1998
to Fall 2002: Assistant Professor, Department of English Language and
Literature, Eastern Michigan University
Undergraduate courses taught include: First
Year Composition; Writing in the Professional World; Writing, Style and
Technology; Writing for the World Wide Web. Graduate courses taught include:
Computers and Writing, Theory and Practice; Cyberspace Rhetoric and Culture;
Writing Research, Theory and Practice
Fall 1996 to Spring 1998: Assistant Professor,
Department of English, Southern Oregon University
Undergraduate courses taught include: First
Year Composition; Advanced Writing; Rhetorical Theory;
Writing as a Profession; Introduction to Literary Theory; Movies about
Movies; World Literature.
Other Teaching Experiences: Graduate
Teaching Assistant, Virginia Commonwealth University; Adjunct instructor,
Virginia Commonwealth University; Graduate Teaching Assistant, Bowling
Green State University.
Service:
- Winter 2005 to present: Undergraduate/Graduate Writing
Program Coordinator, EMU
- Fall 2004 to Winter 2005: Department representative,
EMU Faculty Council
- Winter 2003 to Summer 2003: Member-at-large,
EMU-AAUP Executive Committee
- Fall 1998 to Spring 2002: Department Computer
Lab and Technology Coordinator, EMU
- Fall 1997 to Spring 1998: Writing Center Coordinator,
English Department, Southern Oregon University
- Fall 1996 to Summer 1997: Writing Program Coordinator,
Southern Oregon University
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