Karin
Evans
Assistant
Professor, English
Tel.: (630) 942-2027
Fax.: (630) 942-3711
Room: IC 3061b
e-mail: evansk@cod.edu
Areas of Research Interest:
Developmental theories of writing and literacy
Writing placement and assessment
How students transfer their knowledge and expertise about writing
from writing classes to other contexts
Issues in teaching (and not teaching) grammar
Recent Courses Taught:
At
COD --
English Composition 101, 102, and 103
English Composition 091, 093
At other colleges --
Business writing and communication
Advanced writing and grammar courses
Current Projects:
I'm part of a group of English faculty who are making changes in the
placement process for our writing courses. We are refining a placement
rubric and discussing approaches to reading placement essays.
I've been working with Christine Kickels, a faculty member from
the Library, to collect data on how students in my English 103 classes
develop and apply skills in information literacy. This project has resulted
in some significant changes in how I teach research-based writing.
Selected Publications, Presentations, Performances, Books:
Pass
the GED Language Arts Writing Test: 5 Steps to Test Success. New Readers
Press/Trian Publishing, 2003.
"Successful Business Writing."
Business Communication Certificate Program, College of Business Administration,
University of Illinois at Chicago. April-May 2003.
"How to Write Your Own Marketing Copy." Evanston Chamber of
Commerce. February 2003.
GED Scoreboost Writing: Essay Writing and Organizational Skills. New
Readers Press/Trian Publishing, 2002.
"Marketing: Put Yourself in Writing." ASTD-Chicago
Professional Development Network. May 2002.
"Beyond the First Impression: Strategic Writing for Consultants."
Monar Associates, Chicago. April 2002.
"10 Myths About Writing That Hold You Back-And What To Do About
Them." Oak Park Public Library, Oak Park, Illinois. October 2001.
"Visible Consequences: Trading Off Student Development, Program
Development, and Professional Development." Conference on College
Composition and Communication, Atlanta, March 1999.
"Audience and Discourse Community Theory." Theorizing Composition.
Ed. Mary Kennedy. Greenwood Press, 1998.
"Sociolinguistics and Basic Writing Theory: Plural Identities and
Plural Discourses in the Basic Writing Curriculum." Midwest Modern
Language Association, Chicago, 1997.
"'Does This Paper Have to Have an Audience?': Freshman Writers
and Public Discourse." Conference on College Composition and Communication,
Milwaukee, 1996.
"Reforming Developmental Writing: Writing and Agency at the Academic
Edge." With Joanne Addison. Feminist Teacher (Spring/Summer 1995).
Education:
Ph.D., Purdue University, 1997
M.A., North Carolina State University, 1991
B.A., Oberlin College, 1984
Awards and Recognitions:
Purdue Research Foundation Summer Grant,
1995
Purdue University Fellowship, 1991-93
2nd Place, graduate division, Jane Austen Society of North America Literary
Competition, 1991
Graduate Student Certificate for Outstanding Teaching, North Carolina
State University, 1991
More on
this faculty member
In
addition to my academic training and formal teaching experience, I bring
to COD many years of experience as an professional writer and editor.
Because I have been constantly challenged as a writer myself, learning
to manage new types of writing for different situations and clients,
I have great sympathy for students in my classes. As writers, we all
face similar questions: What is the purpose of this writing? What are
the conventions of this genre? What does the reader/evaluator of my
writing need or expect?