English literature and composition

How K-12 book bans affect higher education

Some educators fear removing controversial books from the K-12 curriculum will harm student development and critical thinking—and rob them of the cultural capital colleges expect them to possess.

Image: 

Philip Roth's relationship to academe? It's complicated

Several of novelist Philip Roth's books called out academics as misguided, hyper-political or overtly ambitious. But professors say he was happy to be taught at colleges.

Image: 

MLA Delegate Assembly rejects boycott of Israeli universities

Section: 

Vote by Delegate Assembly was 113-79. Body approves another measure, calling on association to refrain from the boycott.

Image: 

Arizona State U. backs down from some details of a controversial plan for writing instructors

Arizona State, facing criticism, agrees to pay more to some composition instructors assigned extra sections. But the university refuses to back down on courseloads that violate disciplinary standards.

Image: 

Arizona State tells non-tenure-track writing instructors to teach an extra course each semester

Section: 

Arizona State tells non-tenure-track English instructors to shift from 4-4 to 5-5 course load, without increase in compensation and in violation of professional codes on how many writing students one can effectively teach.

Image: 

MLA sees decline in job listings in English and languages

Section: 

MLA's annual jobs report shows dips in hiring for both English and foreign languages.

Image: 

Court rejects suit over 'Hot for Teacher' essay

Federal judge rejects First Amendment challenge from student who was suspended after he wrote about his affections and physical feelings for his instructor.

Writing professors question plagiarism detection software

Writing professors issue warning about plagiarism detection software.

Professors at odds on machine-graded essays

Prominent writing instructor challenges a much-discussed study that found machines can grade student writing about as well as humans.

Two companies give faculty more control of online courses

StraighterLine and Udemy offer the potential of self-employment to entrepreneurial professors. But will a free market for online teaching pay off for faculty?

Pages

Subscribe to RSS - English literature and composition
Back to Top