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Exploring Networks and Protocols in Writing Centers: Future Implications

This piece discusses the intersection of networks, protocols, and writing centers, highlighting the essential role they play in shaping education and discourse. With insights from Tom Fox, Associate Director of the National Writing Project, we delve into the critical dynamics of communication and collaboration in academic settings. By referencing influential texts and concepts, this discussion aims to examine how writing centers can adapt and evolve in response to the challenges posed by society's rapidly changing networked landscape, empowering both students and educators.

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Exploring Networks and Protocols in Writing Centers: Future Implications

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  1. Networks, Protocols, and Writing Centers Tom Fox Associate Director, Site Development National Wrting Project Professor, Rhetoric and Composition, CSU, Chico

  2. Talking about the Future Upstanders and Bystanders

  3. A wrathful Jordanian Girl

  4. Terrifying image of violent, rampaging Iraqis

  5. Irate Egyptians taking a break from their #MuslimRage:

  6. "I'm having such a goodhair day. No one even knows. #MuslimRage" — Hend (retweeted 2900 times). Lost your kid Jihad at the airport. Can't yell for him. #MuslimRage — Leila (retweeted 1000 times). "When you realize that if you have a 5 o'clock shadow it can be deemed a security threat." — Taufiq Rahim.

  7. Good Places to start: Barabasi, Albert-László. Linked. New York: Plume, 2003. Castells, Manuel. Networks of Outrage and Hope. Malden, MA: Polity Press, 2012. Dingo, Rebecca. Networking Arguments. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2012. Galloway, Alexander and Eugene Thacker. The Exploit: A Theory of Networks> Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2007. Latour, Bruno. Reassembling the Social. New York: Oxford, 2005. Lima, Manuel. “The Power of Networks.” RSA Animate. 2012. Spinuzzi, Clay. Network. Cambridge, Cambridge UP, 2008. Watts, Duncan. Six Degrees of Separation: the Science of a Connected Age. New York: Norton, 2003.

  8. Galloway:Protocol “is a horizontal, distributed, control apparatus that guides the technical and political formation of networks” (The Exploit 28).

  9. Galloway #2:“To refuse protocol is not so much to reject today’s technologies but to direct these protocological technologies, whose distributed structure is empowering indeed, toward emanicipated media created by active social actors rather than passive users” (Protocol 16).

  10. Traditional Writing Center network

  11. Writing Center with Writing Fellows

  12. Writing Center with Writing Fellows and Writing in the Disciplines Program for Faculty

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