SIGWROC

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The Writing and Rhetorics of Code (WROC)

About

Exigence

For over 30 years, writing and rhetoric scholars have explored the relationships between programming, writing, and rhetoric. This body of work has built from the premise that code is writing: it has dynamic purposes, authors, and audiences both human and machine. Out of this legacy, a growing number of scholars are actively conducting research and developing pedagogies rooted in understanding the communicative and rhetorical dimensions of computer programming. As a means to sustain this scholarly community, we formed a NCTE/CCCC Special Interest group in 2017, so we could solidify our field and presence across the discipline.

Current Committee Members

Profile picture of Chris Lindgren

Chair

Chris Lindgren

Assistant Professor of Technical Communication at Virginia Tech

Dr. Chris Lindgren's (he/him) research and teaching focuses on coding as a form of writing with data, digital cultural rhetoric, and visual rhetoric.

Profile image of Dr. Brandee Easter

Associate Chair

Brandee Easter

Assistant Professor of Writing at York University

Dr. Brandee Easter's research and teaching focuses on digital rhetoric, feminist rhetoric, and 21st century literacies.

Profile image of Maggie Fernandes, Assistant Professor of Rhetoric and Composition

Communication Officer

Maggie Fernandes

Assistant Professor of Rhetoric and Composition at University of Arkansas

Dr. Maggie Fernandes's (she/her) research and teaching focuses on digital cultural rhetorics, visual rhetoric, content moderation, and writing assessment.

Profile image of Ashley Rea, Assistant Professor of Rhetoric and Composition

At-Large Member

Ashley Rea

Assistant Professor of Rhetoric and Composition at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University

Dr. Ashley Rea researches technology & equity, teaches technical communication and ux writing, and serves as the Director of the Eagle Writing & Design Lab. Her work specializes in feminist coding literacy.

Profile of Anuj Gupta

Graduate Student Representative

Anuj Gupta

PhD Student at University of Arizona

Anuj Gupta is a PhD student, UX researcher, Instructional designer, and Data Science and Digital Scholarship Fellow at the University of Arizona. His research and teaching agenda focuses on designing, analyzing, testing, and deploying educational technologies to create transformative learning experiences that promote social justice, inclusion, and empowerment for diverse audiences.

Profile of Oscar Garcia

Graduate Student Representative

Oscar Garcia

PhD Student at University of Massachusetts Amherst

Garcia's research interests lie in critical race theory, multimodal pedagogy, first year writing instruction, writing pedagogy, code-meshing, BIPOC rhetoric and Hip Hop pedagogy.

Former Committee Members

Communication Officer

Cara Marta Messina

Assistant Professor of English at Marist College

Dr. Cara Marta Messina's research and teaching focus on digital rhetoric, intersectional feminism, game studies, coding and data rhetorics, and fan studies.

At-Large Member

Sarah Young

Postdoc in Digitization (Media and Communication) at Erasmus University Rotterdam

Dr. Sarah Young researches surveillance, technology, communication, digitalization, policy, justice, and ethics, especially for systems and in the workplace. She spent over 11 years as an investigator doing national security and public trust background investigations in the United States.

Graduate Student Representative

Elena Kalodner-Martin

Ph.D. Candidate at University of Massachusetts Amherst

Elena Kalodner-Martin's research is at the intersection of the rhetoric of health and medicine, technical communication, and feminist studies. Her dissertation theorizes patient narratives on social media as a form of technical and technological expertise.

Co-Chair

Antonio Byrd

Assistant Professor at University of Missouri – Kansas City

Dr. Antonio Byrd studies how Black people access and learn computer programming to address racial and economic inequality in their communities.

Graduate Student Representative

Alfred Owusu-Ansah

Ph.D. Student at Michigan Technological University

Alfred Owusu-Ansah (he/him/his) is a PhD student at the Department of Humanities at Michigan Technological University. His PhD research seeks to argue for a broader understanding of literacy-in-action by advancing a posthuman pedagogy for writing and programming.

Meetings

2017 CCCCs Meeting

Our innaugural meeting held in Portland, OR! We set the foundations of the annual intention to meet and stabilize the field. We also went out for burgers and fries after the meeting.

Documents
  • Agenda

2018 CCCCs Meeting

No official meeting was held this year, but Dr. Antonio Byrd was able to round a few folks together to keep the momentum going.

Documents
  • None available

2021 CCCCs Meeting

The WROC SIG met virtually for 4Cs 2021. The mission of the WROC group was introduced and short lightning round breakout rooms were created so group members could get to know each other.

Documents
  • Agenda

2021 First Official Committee Meeting

The first official WROC Committee Meeting after elections. The committee discusses goals to continue the development of WROC, including building bibliographies and a mentorship program.

Documents
  • Agenda

2022 Meeting

SIGWROC met virtually again for 4Cs 2022.

Documents
  • Notes

2023 Meeting

SIGWROC met face-to-face at 4Cs 2023 in Chicago, IL.

Documents
  • Agenda

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