User:Kaitsass/Patricia Bizzell

Patricia Bizzell, Ph.D. is a Professor of English, emerita, and former Chairperson of the English Department at College of the Holy Cross, United States, where she taught from 1978 to 2019. She founded and directed the Writer's Workshop, a peer tutoring facility, and a writing-across-the-curriculum program. She directed the College Honors and English Honors programs and taught first-year composition, rhetoric and public speaking, nineteenth-century American literature, and women's literature. A scholar and writer, Bizzell has authored or co-authored half a dozen books, written dozens of articles and book chapters, composed more than a dozen book reviews and review essays, and presented a large number of papers at academic conferences.

Areas of Scholarly Focus
Bizzell's research interests include the question of how the increasing diversification of academic discourses affects the teaching of writing to college students, with a special focus on students that she terms "basic writers." Bizzell, throughout her career, has focused on students coming from traditionally disadvantaged economic and social backgrounds in order to study how rhetoric and composition can be effectively taught to students coming from a diverse range of backgrounds.

Bizzell is also the subject of a profile chapter in Women's Ways of Making It in Rhetoric and Composition, edited by Michelle Ballif, Diane Davis, and Roxanne Mountford. The book aims to share both the successes and failures of women in the field of rhetoric and composition, with the aim of inspiring other women to enter the field. The book covers a range of topics from encountering sexism in the workplace and balancing a career and family life, issues that are further addressed in the chapter on Bizzell. This chapter offers further insight into Bizzell's scholarly interests and areas of research.

Influential Works
Bizzell has written numerous books, book chapters, and articles throughout her career. Some of her most influential works are outlined below.

In Academic Discourse and Critical Consciousness, Bizzell traces her experiences as of teaching first-year college composition courses. The essays, written over a number of years, come together to provide insights into how her teaching and thinking about pedagogy have changed over the years. Compiling the essays in this way traces a trajectory of how thinking about and implementing teaching practices have evolved for Bizzell over her number of years of experience. The essay collection has an extensive focus on what happens when students from diverse backgrounds are asked to use language in specific ways in college classrooms, tracing practices and pedagogies that have been successful in her own classrooms over the years.

Bizzell's article "Cognition, Convention, and Certainty: What We Need to Know About Writing" explores the relationship between students' ability to engage in thoughtful contemplation and their writing abilities. The relationship between thought and language, according to Bizzell, needs to be given more careful consideration in the composition classroom. It is only by helping students learn to frame their thinking that teachers can help them to be productive and successful writers.

"What Happens When Basic Writers Come to College?" tries to answer one of the research questions that seems to be most central to Bizzell's research. This article examines what happens when students with diverse backgrounds, dialects, and class standings come together in a college composition classroom. Bizzell, using her own teaching experience as part of her research, delves into how these students can find success in college classrooms and settings.

Feedback from Dr. Vetter
Hi

Good work on this so far. I see that you have made some changes to the lead and added a section on Bizzell's research interests. Why don't you make this a new level 1 heading entitled "Areas of Scholarly Focus" or something similar. I would also recommend creating a new section underneath that one entitled "Influential Works." In this section, you could begin to do a little summary of some of her most-cited scholarship. One way to find an academic's most influential work is to measure it by how many citations it has received. Here's a link to a google scholar page that shows some of Bizzell's most cited work, https://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&as_sdt=0%2C39&q=Patricia+bizzell&btnG=. That would be a great place to begin if you would like to add content centered on that particular focus.

Another addition idea would be to look up Bizzell in conjunction with "CCCC" and "Awards" - adding some information about major awards she has won to the lead can help in terms of establishing notability (and adding content). For example, here's a source related to her winning the CCCC Exemplar Award - https://www.jstor.org/stable/20457083?seq=1

You're doing great so far. Let me know if there's anything I can do to hep!

DarthVetter (talk) 17:20, 15 March 2021 (UTC)