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Erscheint vorauss. 19. Mai 2026
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The words teachers write on student work have the power to help students think critically and to hone and project their voices with confidence. They also have the power to shut students down. These words may affect student identity, motivation, and improvement of writing skills. Research suggests that many of the types of comments teachers and other reviewers write on student papers are negative, nonsensical, unhelpful, and even potentially harmful, especially for first-generation, working-class, and otherwise disenfranchised students. This harm can be understood as a form of violence.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The words teachers write on student work have the power to help students think critically and to hone and project their voices with confidence. They also have the power to shut students down. These words may affect student identity, motivation, and improvement of writing skills. Research suggests that many of the types of comments teachers and other reviewers write on student papers are negative, nonsensical, unhelpful, and even potentially harmful, especially for first-generation, working-class, and otherwise disenfranchised students. This harm can be understood as a form of violence. Nonviolent Response, which is centered on tenets for nonviolent teaching practices, presents an approach to writing responses that helps eliminate harmful affect and integrates efficient, carefully crafted, and clear guidance to writers. Sheri Rysdam and JT Torres offer evidence-based methods for effective, timesaving, motivational responses useful to teachers of writing and other responders or reviewers in professional and public contexts.
Autorenporträt
Sheri Rysdam (Author) Sheri Rysdam is associate professor in English/Writing and director of the Writing Center at Eastern Oregon University. Her work has most recently appeared in Women's Health Advocacy: Rhetorical Ingenuity for the 21st Century and Inclusive Aims: Rhetoric's Role in Reproductive Justice. JT Torres (Author) JT Torres is director of the Houston H. Harte Center for Teaching and Learning at Washington and Lee University. He is the coeditor of How to Incorporate Equity and Justice in Your Teaching and the coauthor of How to Use Writing for Teaching and Learning and the arts-based ethnography Situated Narratives and Sacred Dance: Performing the Entangled Histories of Cuba and West Africa.