{"title":"书评:《机构素养:参与学术信息技术背景下的写作和交流》,作者:Stuart A. Selber","authors":"L. Dush","doi":"10.1177/10506519211044713","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Stuart A. Selber’s new book, Institutional Literacies: Engaging Academic IT Contexts for Writing and Communication, published in the midst of the global pandemic’s great shift to remote learning, explores the neglected topic of academic information and technology (IT). Selber defines academic IT as “centralized campus units responsible for planning, implementing, managing, and evaluating information technologies for institutional purposes” (p. xi). If academic IT units were a powerful force shaping local teaching and learning practices prior to 2020, they are even more so now. Our universities would simply not function at this historical moment without the technologies, policies, and people of academic IT. In arguing that writing and communication teachers should strategically engage with academic IT, Selber has done the field an important service, providing both grounds and methods for future pedagogical, administrative, and research projects that engage these powerful institutional entities. Overall, Selber approaches academic IT from a rhetorical and institutional perspective, arguing that teachers must understand academic IT units as particular local formations. The book both reflects and leverages Selber’s many years of engagement with academic IT at his home institution, Penn State University. Its central contribution is a three-part heuristic to guide teachers of writing and communication as they historicize, spatialize, and textualize academic IT units on their campus. The heuristic, Selber says, will help teachers to “order their thinking about what academic IT units Book Review","PeriodicalId":46414,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Business and Technical Communication","volume":"36 1","pages":"120 - 123"},"PeriodicalIF":1.8000,"publicationDate":"2021-10-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Book Review: Institutional Literacies: Engaging Academic IT Contexts for Writing and Communication by Stuart A. Selber\",\"authors\":\"L. Dush\",\"doi\":\"10.1177/10506519211044713\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Stuart A. Selber’s new book, Institutional Literacies: Engaging Academic IT Contexts for Writing and Communication, published in the midst of the global pandemic’s great shift to remote learning, explores the neglected topic of academic information and technology (IT). Selber defines academic IT as “centralized campus units responsible for planning, implementing, managing, and evaluating information technologies for institutional purposes” (p. xi). If academic IT units were a powerful force shaping local teaching and learning practices prior to 2020, they are even more so now. Our universities would simply not function at this historical moment without the technologies, policies, and people of academic IT. In arguing that writing and communication teachers should strategically engage with academic IT, Selber has done the field an important service, providing both grounds and methods for future pedagogical, administrative, and research projects that engage these powerful institutional entities. Overall, Selber approaches academic IT from a rhetorical and institutional perspective, arguing that teachers must understand academic IT units as particular local formations. The book both reflects and leverages Selber’s many years of engagement with academic IT at his home institution, Penn State University. Its central contribution is a three-part heuristic to guide teachers of writing and communication as they historicize, spatialize, and textualize academic IT units on their campus. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
Stuart A. Selber的新书《机构素养:参与学术IT环境的写作和交流》出版于全球大流行向远程学习的巨大转变期间,探讨了学术信息和技术(IT)这一被忽视的主题。Selber将学术IT定义为“为机构目的负责规划、实施、管理和评估信息技术的集中校园单位”(第xi页)。如果学术IT单位在2020年之前是塑造当地教学实践的强大力量,那么现在更是如此。如果没有学术信息技术的技术、政策和人才,我们的大学将无法在这个历史时刻发挥作用。塞尔伯认为写作和交流教师应该战略性地参与学术信息技术,这为该领域提供了重要的服务,为未来的教学、行政和研究项目提供了基础和方法,让这些强大的机构实体参与其中。总的来说,Selber从修辞和制度的角度来看待学术IT,认为教师必须将学术IT单位理解为特定的地方形式。这本书反映并利用了塞尔伯在他的家乡宾夕法尼亚州立大学从事学术IT多年的经验。它的核心贡献是一个由三部分组成的启发式,指导写作和交流教师将校园里的学术IT单元历史化、空间化和文本化。塞尔伯说,这种启发式方法将帮助教师“对学术IT单元的思考进行排序”
Book Review: Institutional Literacies: Engaging Academic IT Contexts for Writing and Communication by Stuart A. Selber
Stuart A. Selber’s new book, Institutional Literacies: Engaging Academic IT Contexts for Writing and Communication, published in the midst of the global pandemic’s great shift to remote learning, explores the neglected topic of academic information and technology (IT). Selber defines academic IT as “centralized campus units responsible for planning, implementing, managing, and evaluating information technologies for institutional purposes” (p. xi). If academic IT units were a powerful force shaping local teaching and learning practices prior to 2020, they are even more so now. Our universities would simply not function at this historical moment without the technologies, policies, and people of academic IT. In arguing that writing and communication teachers should strategically engage with academic IT, Selber has done the field an important service, providing both grounds and methods for future pedagogical, administrative, and research projects that engage these powerful institutional entities. Overall, Selber approaches academic IT from a rhetorical and institutional perspective, arguing that teachers must understand academic IT units as particular local formations. The book both reflects and leverages Selber’s many years of engagement with academic IT at his home institution, Penn State University. Its central contribution is a three-part heuristic to guide teachers of writing and communication as they historicize, spatialize, and textualize academic IT units on their campus. The heuristic, Selber says, will help teachers to “order their thinking about what academic IT units Book Review
期刊介绍:
JBTC is a refereed journal that provides a forum for discussion of communication practices, problems, and trends in business, professional, scientific, and governmental fields. As such, JBTC offers opportunities for bridging dichotomies that have traditionally existed in professional communication journals between business and technical communication and between industrial and academic audiences. Because JBTC is designed to disseminate knowledge that can lead to improved communication practices in both academe and industry, the journal favors research that will inform professional communicators in both sectors. However, articles addressing one sector or the other will also be considered.