Page 11 - Composition in Convergence The Impact of New Media On
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X           PREFACE

           In the pages that follow, I try to understand what Yancey's fourth
        wave  in writing  assessment looks like. How does this  new phase in
        assessment  differ  from  older periods in terms  of historical  signifi-
        cance, textual characteristics, student  ownership of the text, validity
        and reliability, teacher practices, and access to important  technolo-
        gies? Important  shifts occur in these areas as the two technologies in
        Composition—    computers  and  writing  assessment—play   an  in-
        creasingly more important  role in the teaching of writing. Moreover,
        there is much for writing instructors  and their programs  to discuss
        and  discover  in  the  convergence  process,  because  it  appears  as
        though  different institutions  will enter and resist these new contexts
        at  various  stages. We need to  see convergence in  Composition  not
        just as a global phenomenon that affects  the entire field but as a suc-
        cession  of liminal  moments  that  ebb and  flow  over  time.  Conver-
        gence  is  also  a  highly  localized  happening  as  well  in  that  each
        institution's  political,  social,  economic,  and  cultural  forces  will
        shape the way the technologies are blended. What looks right in a re-
        search-based  university  may  not  fit a 2-year  college or a  compre-
        hensive state  university.
           That is why the material presented in these chapters is not as pre-
        scriptively written  as some readers may  have liked. Although  I do
        offer  suggestions and ideas based on what has worked in my  class-
        rooms  over  the  last  few years, that  information  should  be taken
        solely as  suggestion  and  idea generation.  If studying  convergence
        has taught me one thing,  it is that anything  written  as being  "the
        way"  to implement instruction  using technology  will be outdated
        by  the  time  the  book  is published.  Technology  moves  at  a  much
        more rapid  pace than publication.  That  is why  I hope my  work is
        used as fodder for discussion, consideration, and improvement  on
        what  has been presented  to  date.  There are many  ways  to  work
        with  the  convergence  of  technologies  in  the  writing  classroom;
        each of us has to seek out what works best for us, our students,  and
        our programs.  Perhaps there are talented graduate students  or ju-
        nior faculty who can take this material,  improve on what has been
        written,  and lead the field into the next waves of technological con-
        vergence. I certainly hope  so.
           To return  to Dennis Baron's 1998 essay: Regardless of the  levels of
        convergence that  emerge in  Composition,  Baron  is right:  None of
        us—neither students nor teachers—should forget our day jobs when
        it comes to technology and writing.  Writing is a significant aspect of
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