Page 83 - Composition in Convergence The Impact of New Media On
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52           CHAPTER 2

        between  visual  and  textual  rhetoric  because  those  texts  speak  to
        wider audiences and demand that writers and readers use a range of
        literacies to comprehend the information  contained within  them.
           As students become comfortable with using both  mundane   texts
        and multiple literacies in networked environments,  compositionists
        can also count on students becoming even more aware of how   texts
        are read by others. A result of this evolution in evaluation becomes
        real student ownership of the text. Student writers truly come to ac-
        cept responsibility for putting  colored marks on a blank screen and
        do not merely replicate what they see their instructors modeling for
        them  in  the  front  of the  room.  At last,  Composition's  culture  be-
        comes genuinely democratic and progressive. Students and their in-
        structors  together  share  power  with  words  instead  of one  having
        power  over another's  words. Assessment becomes an  extension of
        dialogue  among  authors  in  a  writing  community  instead  of  an
        adversarial experience.
           Is this possible? Is this  Utopic thinking?
           Perhaps. Then again,  perhaps  not.
           What will make this proposed situation a reality in Composition's
        culture is a radical reconception of what assessment is for the  e-text.
        Writing assessment needs to  address the  diversity  found in  e-texts
        and the diversity of the electronic writing process. The type of writ-
        ing assessment that composition studies should call for in an age of
        technological convergence corresponds to the following six points:

           •  Acknowledges the complexities of the communication  environ-
             ment, the online writing process, and the technologies involved
             in producing an interactive  environment
           •  Perceives  students  who  write  in networked  spaces to  be  pub-
             lished authors  and grants  those students the  same rights  and
             privileges as other writers  in a scholarly  environment
           •  Recognizes and  articulates  the  multiple forms of information
             needed across diverse communication   situations
           •  Considers  the  students'  ability  to  select  applicable  tools  or
             sources that conform to the discourse community  (or commu-
             nities) that students  occupy
           •  Confirms  students'  capability  to  evaluate  textual  materials
             across multiple mediums and formats
           •  Demonstrates students'  awareness of and aptitude for  manipu-
             lating  and  organizing  acquired  information  across  multiple
             media, formats, and computer operating  system platforms
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