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Dànielle Nicole DeVoss | Michigan State University Andy Frazee | Georgia Institute of Technology

Dànielle Nicole DeVoss | Michigan State University Andy Frazee | Georgia Institute of Technology James P. Purdy | Duquesne University David Sheridan | Michigan State University Douglas Walls | University of Central Florida Rusty Carpenter | Eastern Kentucky University. OVERVIEW.

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Dànielle Nicole DeVoss | Michigan State University Andy Frazee | Georgia Institute of Technology

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  1. Dànielle Nicole DeVoss | Michigan State University Andy Frazee | Georgia Institute of Technology James P. Purdy | Duquesne University David Sheridan | Michigan State University Douglas Walls | University of Central Florida Rusty Carpenter | Eastern Kentucky University

  2. OVERVIEW • share insights • address (some) key questions • discuss ideas, plans, action items Materials from this panel, including the notes we will generate, will be available at: www.digitalwriting.org/cw2014

  3. A Space to Play, A Space to Compose: A Model for Creative Collaborations and Composition Practices • Noel Studio spaces: Greenhouse, Discovery Classroom, Breakout Spaces, Practice Rooms, Conference Room • Noel Studio pedagogy: collaborative, creative, multimodal • Spatial/pedagogical intersections/overlaps

  4. Creative collaborations and composing practices Noel Studio as a place/space for experimentation and exploration Noel Studio space suggests the importance of play through space design/architexture and resources available

  5. Noel Studio composition as gallery space public spaces for invention social spaces for composing material spaces for play Students engage creative spaces creatively kinesthetic messy physical

  6. This was a moment of creativity, innovation, social/cultural entrepreneurship, and of making.

  7. “ CE gave me a chance to explore some of the activities about which I was unsure—both in my own natural ability and my own interest. If it weren't for the CE I'd likely never have created several of the videos that have been published in other major venues. The CE (and the people behind it) embodies the type of thinking that will not only bring MSU, but higher education as a whole, forward in society. ” Dan Nufer, Professional Writing, 2012 User Experience Designer, Razorfish, Chicago

  8. Shaping Community, Collaboration, and Multiliteracies at Georgia Tech

  9. Three spaces Laptop Classroom | Communication Center | Program HQ

  10. Match physical spaces and philosophy, pedagogy, and research practices.

  11. Get a hardhat.

  12. Residential College in the Arts and Humanities

  13. Language and Media Center

  14. The LMC as a Social Hub We were just hanging out in the LMC on a Monday afternoon. I was kind of waiting between class and my ILO . . . (RCAH Student)

  15. The Language and Media Center as Hub in Learning Ecology • How does space help to connect people, technologies, resources, compositions, ideas, information, etc.? • How do these heterogeneous elements, in turn, construct space? • Alearning ecologycan be glimpsed in • chance & planned encounters between various human & nonhuman actants; • assigned & self-sponsored composing activities; • the fluid movement of people, compositions, & ideas through proximate but heterogeneous spaces.

  16. expanding space and the extracurricular @wallsdouglas

  17. different domains / different practices New practices that are harder to learn New practices that are easy New practices that might be in opposition to old practices

  18. What aspects/elements of space are most in need of attention in the field now? In the future? Why? • How do we get to the infrastructure inside the institution that allows for creating and sustaining these sorts of spaces? (especially in a context of lower enrollments) > build coalitions with other departments and colleges; smartly share and co-access spaces; strategize with development people (early on!) • How do we craft rhetorically savvy, institutionally smart strategic plans (and then follow up on and enact them)? > find allies and affiliates (start with students) • How can we anticipate changes in technological needs and spaces (e.g., labs?) • How do we shape our spaces around publicness (composing, presenting, sharing, etc.)? And how can we balance that with the necessity to (sometimes) close things off? • How both leverage and address competing tensions and aspirations?

  19. build coalitions with other departments and colleges; smartly share and co-access spaces; strategize with development people (early on!) • find allies and affiliates (start with students) • draw on existing theory and work is critical; space work is never mono-disciplinary > EDUCAUSE, IT Commons, library literature • Identify what we’re doing that is particular to us and figure out what is in dialogue with what others are doing

  20. In what ways have spatial considerations changed in writing instruction in the last decade? How have these changes affected the ways we teach—and think about—writing? • we’ve run out of classrooms; space is at a premium in pressured ways • we’ve run out of computer lab spaces • is a laptop a space? is a smartphone a space? (it’s not the laptop—it’s the activity with/through it, and the people, software, and more) • how can we rupture the deeply embedded understandings and practices of spaces (if need be…)? • What do we have to swap and transform for space access? How does that impact our teaching practices? (engaging both improvisational models and intentional models) • How do we shake up the various spaces on our campuses (e.g., libraries)? • “Ambient sociality”; building for possibility • Where writing happens and how to integrate, address, or not = HUGE shift (what spaces can we adopt and use without colonizing?)

  21. Engage pedagogical options > just one model is limiting; protect and allow pedagogical flexibility

  22. What aspects/elements are unique to online/digital writing classrooms and nonclassroom spaces? • Bridging gap and creating space for digital/virtual spaces within physical spaces • All spaces have (distributed) barriers; need to negotiate them • Adobe Learning Center > space for instruction for shared/cloud software and access (central space) • Institutions, imagery, etc., tend to situate online/virtual learning spaces as gateway spaces to our physical institutions; where is the where? • Space puts things there; how do we create that in online space? (but… there are space barriers—like parking, etc.) • How can we consider safety in our spaces? (e.g., how can you lock down if your walls are glass? How can we share material but still protect students’ identity and information?) • We have to curate and archive practices to share them • We need to work strategically with online and physical communities to do space-based work

  23. What are some techniques for networking with and best communicating with different stakeholders where space design is concerned? • [we ran out of time!]

  24. What advice do you have for funding writing classroom (online or off) and nonclassroom space (re)design projects? • [we ran out of time!]

  25. How do you suggest navigating institutional procedures for space (re)design requests? What local considerations are crucial to consider? • [we ran out of time!]

  26. What approaches are most persuasive in convincing stakeholders (from students to administration) of the infrastructures involved in/necessary for writing? • [we ran out of time!]

  27. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J8UyEXemtp0

  28. What opportunities does space provide for reconceiving writing instruction? • [we ran out of time!]

  29. Other questions…? • [we ran out of time!]

  30. [nooooo tengo tiempo!]

  31. Concluding thoughts Making space: • The physical and digital spaces we use to produce, circulate, deliver, research, and teach writing shape our practices and our products. Architexture: • The ways in which physical and digital spaces affect writing processes, instruction, and scholarship may not be obvious to administrators, students, or even our colleagues. We need to make explicit their influences and our needs.

  32. Concluding thoughts Infrastructure: • Local conditions matter. Infrastructure needs will vary by institutions, course, and program. Rhetoric of design: • Pedagogical decisions should drive infrastructural decisions. The successful examples shared here started with an underlying philosophy of design and theory of composing.

  33. Materials from this panel, including the notes we generated, will be available at: www.digitalwriting.org/cw2014

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