Invention, Arrangement, Style, Memory . . . . Delivery. Of the five rhetorical canons defined by Aristotle, Delivery is the most overlooked and most frequently undertheorized. Delivery provides a lens into the ways composition curricula is designed; into the kinds of writing expected from students; and to the new electronic, physical, and curricular spaces created for composing. Delivering College Composition addresses the need for a more rigorous examination of Delivery, arguing that composition is increasingly being delivered in different ways by different individuals for different purposes within different contexts-yet retaining its identity as well. Kathleen Yancey asks a number of probing questions about the current state of writing instruction: What is college composition? What does it look like, given the multiple ways it is delivered? What features do courses share? Is there a common understanding about their purposes, methods, and outcomes? How do multiple delivery systems alter and redefine this thing we call college composition? How does delivery matter? From a research university, to a private college, to an historically black school, to a cyberschool, to advanced placement English classes, Delivering College Composition gives answers to these questions through in-depth analyses from more than a dozen teaching environments. Focusing strongly on practice and its theoretical implications, Yancey and company provide a frank and informative "thick description of classroom instruction, and in the process offer new definitions of what composition means in the present-and what it might look like in the future.
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