
VISION
The Writing Program envisions a diverse department that promotes the development
of skills, practices, and knowledge about writing that are central to
a just society.
MISSION
The Writing
Program promotes understanding and acquisition of multiple literacies
through teaching, research, and community involvement. Thus the mission
is four-fold:
- We promote
excellence in writing and rhetoric in the undergraduate program at SU
- We produce
innovative, high-quality research on composition and cultural rhetoric
- We prepare
graduate students in the Composition and Cultural Rhetoric Ph.D. Program
for productive vocations as teachers, scholars, writers, and citizens.
- And we
develop sustained linkages with community groups to support writing
and learning in the community and the society we live in.
AIMS
The aims of the Writing Program are to do the following:
- Promote
critical literacy in students to prepare them for an increasingly complex
and multi-mediated world.
- Teach
writing for a variety of contexts: academic, professional, and public.
- Provide
a rigorous undergraduate composition curriculum that helps students
develop skills in academic literacy, including critical reading, writing,
analysis, argument, and research skills.
- Provide
an undergraduate curriculum that teaches writing as a social practice,
giving special attention to issues of diversity as they affect rhetorical
practice.
- Provide
a rigorous graduate curriculum that promotes thoughtful and critical
inquiry into the history, theory, and practices of composition and cultural
rhetoric.
- Create
a teaching community that promotes excellence in innovative teaching
at both undergraduate and graduate levels.
- Create
an inquiry-based teaching and learning environment.
- Create
curricula at undergraduate and graduate levels that mutually enrich
one another.
- Facilitate
respectful and productive collaborations in teaching and research.
- Attract
and retain a diverse, strong faculty and graduate student body.
- Serve
the local and global communities by co-creating, disseminating, sharing,
and applying knowledge.
GUIDING PRINCIPLES
- We believe
that all writing is culturally contextual, embedded in complicated networks
of meaning, power, and technology.
- We believe
that all texts are composed within complex rhetorical situations comprised
of rhetors, audience, exigencies, intentions, contexts, and other contingencies.
- We believe
that writing is a powerful intellectual tool and practice and that writing
has the potential to be socially transformative.
- We value
the richness and interplay of differences, and are committed to intellectual,
social, cultural, and ethnic diversity.
- We believe
in respectful critical dialogue within the community of students, faculty,
and staff.
- We believe
that all teachers in the Writing Program—from full-time faculty
to part-time faculty to graduate students—are integral to the
success of our mission, and as such must be treated respectfully, fairly,
and with dignity and must be compensated fairly for their contributions.
- We believe
in the value of including Writing Program teachers at all levels in
discussions toward decision-making.
- We believe
in the importance of fostering dialogue across communities—academic
and civic—about the purpose, meaning, and function of writing.
Approved
by the Faculty, February 2005 |