Genre Innovations in Dissertation Writing: Trends and Recommendations for Rhetoric and Composition Graduate Programs

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2023

Keywords

Genre Innovation, Genre Analysis, Dissertation-writing, Doctoral Thesis, Rhetorical Genre Studies (RGS)

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

https://doi.org/10.2458/jslat.5788

Abstract

Concomitant with calls from scholars to pluralize academic writing to reflect diverse social realities (Canagarajah, 2013; Dryer et al., 2014; Horner, 2011; Martinez, 2020; Palmeri, 2007; Weisser, 2002) and with advocacy efforts by industry specialists to make dissertation writing more in tune with a rapidly changing professional world (Futures Initiative, 2014; Porter et al, 2018), several Rhetoric and Composition graduate students have been creating innovative dissertations. However, research on graduate-level dissertation writing programs shows that genre innovation is not explicitly taught in such programmes (Autry and Carter, 2015; Baillargeon, 2020; Habib et al., 2020; Sundstrom, 2014). To assist graduate programme directors and instructors in responding to calls to transform dissertation writing by creating curricular reforms, data on the type of dissertations considered to be innovative by disciplinary members would be helpful. Welch et al. (2002) conducted the last such survey but more recent surveys are required. In this paper, I present results from a study where I collected (n = 21) Rhetoric and Composition dissertations written between 2000-2020 that are considered to be innovative by disciplinary members. Findings show that narrative discourses (76%) and multimodal artifacts (62%) are the two biggest types of innovation in this dataset, while translingualism (9%) does not make a prominent presence. The discussion section contextualizes these findings and provides recommendations for graduate program directors as well as researchers.

Rights Information

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Was this content written or created while at USF?

No

Citation / Publisher Attribution

The Journal of Second Language Acquisition and Teaching (JSLAT), v. 29

Share

COinS