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ENGL 5382

ENGL 5382. Week 1: Thursday, August 28. Introductions:. History/background of course, instructor, students Goals for this semester—role of NVivo software My teaching approach My tips for success in the distance classroom: Engage—with each other, with the material

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ENGL 5382

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  1. ENGL 5382 Week 1: Thursday, August 28

  2. Introductions: • History/background of course, instructor, students • Goals for this semester—role of NVivo software • My teaching approach • My tips for success in the distance classroom: • Engage—with each other, with the material • Be responsible for your own success • Ask questions • Give me feedback—what works, and what doesn’t work? • 3 key technologies: Skype, Wordpress, Nvivo—Questions? Suggestions?

  3. First things first… Socrates: That is just what surprises me, Gorgias, and has made me ask you all this time what in the world the power of rhetoric can be. For, viewed in this light, its greatness comes over me as something supernatural. Gorgias: Ah yes, if you knew all, Socrates,--how it comprises in itself practically all powers at once! And I will tell you a striking proof of this: many and many a time have I gone with my brother or other doctors to visit one of their patients, and found him unwilling either to take medicine or submit to the surgeon’s knife or cautery; and when the doctor failed to persuade him I succeeded, by no other art than that of rhetoric….So great, so strange, is the power of this art. --Plato, Gorgias, ca. 386 B.C.E.

  4. Some historical markers: 1960s-1970s: As Judy Segal says, Thomas Kuhn opened science to rhetoric, and Kenneth Burke opened rhetoric to science. 1977: “biopsychosocial” model emerges in medicine, health communication emerges as a communication subfield 1989: Lawrence J. Prelli publishes A Rhetoric of Science: Inventing Scientific Discourse 1990: Alan Gross publishes The Rhetoric of Science (reprinted in 1996) 2005: Special issue of JBTC edited by Ellen Barton, special issue of TCQ edited by Alan Gross and Laura Gurak 2013: University of Cincinnati Symposium, “Discourses of Health, Medicine, and Society”

  5. Defining some terms: Rhetoric Interdisciplinary, Transdisciplinary, Multidisciplinary, Postdisciplinary (might start with “discipline”) Medicine Health Science Globalization Others???

  6. Your blog posts for Week 1: Julie: Water.org in relation to global health and rhetoric Maryn: Teen pregnancy, sex education, and cultural considerations Gail: Doctors Without Borders Joy: Discharge documents for newborn infant and mother Maggie: National Climate Assessment report Jennifer: Health at Every Size (HAES)

  7. For next week: Hawhee, D., & Hartelius, E.J. (2009). Review essay: Sustainable scholarship and the rhetoric of medicine. Quarterly Journal of Speech, 95, 457-470. Segal book, (Introduction + Ch. 1) Bazeley & Jackson book, Chapter 1 (“Perspectives: Qualitative Computing and NVivo”) Fernández-Guerrero, I.M., et al. (2014). A forerunner of qualitative health research: Risueño's report against the use of statistics. Qualitative Health Research, 24, 124-135.

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