Pre-Conference Workshop Schedule
These workshops are for graduate students and are free. Register by Thursday, April 8, 11:59 pm EST.
Read presenters' bios.
Download the complete schedule below as a Word file.
Wednesday, April 14, 2021
Though many of DBLAC's programs are tailored to Black graduate students, we are increasingly aware of the collective and universal need for community, especially in intellectual pursuits. That considered, we strive to share our methods and also to promote supportive communal interactions when possible. Our Writing Workshop is an extension of our organization’s goal to foster a learning community where members are able to present their ideas, research, and writing amongst emerging scholars as a means of professional support and development.
During the Writing Workshop, we will engage in a brief synchronous talk on anti-racism writing with/in community, participants will be encouraged to share writing goals and work asynchronously through individual projects and writing activities, and we will conclude with a brief synchronous closing talk.
This workshop is open to all interested participants.
Presenter Profiles: Khirsten L. Scott and Louis M. Maraj
While we have always known it is critical to one’s success that we carve a lane for our work, it has become even more needed to situate our research in its own lane now that we are operating in the virtual space--for what would be traditionally face-to-face conferences. At many of these conferences, connections are made and working relationships are built. Journal editors, department chairs, and general colleagues pull up to hear and meet up-and-coming graduate scholars. However, now that we are in the virtual space as a response to COVID-19, we got a gap on how to continue the amplification of graduate students in and out of virtual conference spaces. Even more so, with the recent response to the Conference on College Composition & Communication having to reduce the conference “by approximately 50 percent to accommodate the financial and logistical constraints of shifting from an in-person Convention to a virtual event,” we are at a space where we must reckon with just how can graduate students ensure their work is heard and amplified throughout their research communities without having to rely on “structural” conference spaces. While I understand the difficult choice CCCC 2021 Program Chair Holly Hassel and event staff have had to make, this still led to a great number of graduate students, especially many BIPOC students, left out from the opportunity to present their work on a larger scale. As I move to echo the call from Watson organizers to be more intentional in our conferencing practices and the work we present, I think we need to have a real talk conversation about how to not rely on the conference space to amplify the work of graduate students. This ain’t to say forget the conference, but we def need to be real in having conversations about stayin’ ready to be ready. Obviously, this is a play on the classic “Stay ready so you don’t have to get ready,” yet I’ve revised the statement to include "be ready" to lighten the labor that getting ready assumes. Furthermore, in being ready, the work is continuous and does not depend on a certain movement or call to action for response. You see, once you done got ready for something, that’s it. But the work must always continue if you are to be ready.
In my workshop, specifically geared to graduate students, I will discuss how graduate students can learn how to pivot and situate their work in their field of study on their own terms. We got all the good books on how to develop job materials and how to prepare for the job talk, but what we need to talk about is doing that work before you even hit the market--being ready. Graduate students will have time to reflect on their own personal goals as scholars and practitioners in addition to highlighting the various tools available to amplify not only their work, but the work of their peers. Rather than continuing to see the conference space as an either/or to graduate student research amplification, the conference space should instead be seen as an “and,” in addition to, when it comes to student research. This presentation will have a heightened focus on supporting the work of students from historically marginalized communities but will offer insight on just how we all can move forward in pivoting and amplifying the work of graduate students. This workshop is capped at 75 participants.
Presenter Profile: Temptaous Mckoy
Note: Dr. Restaino is offering an individual mentoring session for up to five workshop participants (draft feedback/conference on project idea); email her a short description of the project and mentoring needs (restainoj@montclair.edu). She will schedule these separately.
Presenter Profile: Jessica Restaino
Thursday, April 15, 2021
Presenter Profile: Jon M. Wargo
Presenter Profile: K. J. Rawson
Presenter Profile: Jerry Won Lee
Friday, April 16, 2021
Presenter Profile: Sandy Tarabochia
This workshop follows Natasha Jones’ (2016, 2020) coalitional approach to narrative inquiry and Natasha Jones and Miriam Williams’ (2020) call for the just use of imagination to examine, (re)imagine, and (re)enact our uptakes of design frameworks and practices in rhetoric, composition, and technical communication. We will begin the workshop with a shared vocabulary for anti-racist, anti-oppressive design; then we will work through a three-part activity that participants can engage in on their own or in a shared document. Throughout the activity, we will attend to temporality, place, and sociality with a coalitional commitment to accounting for positionalities and redressing injustices (Jones 2020). In the first part of the activity, we will examine epistemologies and relations in our uptakes of design frameworks in our research, teaching, and/or community engagement. In the second part of the activity, we will employ our just use of imagination (Jones and Williams 2020) to imagine futures worth working toward in our design uptakes and practices. In the third part of the activity, we will enact our just use of imagination (Jones and Williams 2020) by identifying and committing to coalitional actions to implement anti-racist, anti-oppressive design.
Jones, N. N. (2016). Narrative Inquiry in Human-Centered Design: Examining Silence and Voice to Promote Social Justice Design Scenarios. Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 46(4): 471-492.
Jones, N. N. (2020). Coalitional Learning in the Contact Zones: Inclusion and Narrative Inquiry in Technical Communication and Composition Studies. College English, 82(5): 515-526.
Jones, N. N., & Williams, M. F. (2020). The Just Use of Imagination: A Call to Action. Association of Teachers of Technical Writing List Serv. 10 June 2020.
Presenter Profile:Ann Shivers-McNair
Presenter Profile: Aja Martinez