University of North Carolina Wilmington
University of North Carolina Wilmington
Breaking news! Click for details if visible.

Department

of English


Colleen Reilly

Colleen Reilly

Kathy Rugoff

 

Associate Professor,

Coordinator of Graduate Studies
Morton Hall 157
910.962.7548
reillyc@uncw.edu

Website

 
Degrees  
Postdoctoral Research Appointment in Professional Writing, Purdue University
Ph.D., English Literature, Purdue University
M.A., English Literature, Purdue University
B.A., English, John Carroll University, Cleveland, Ohio
   
Academic Interests  

Dr. Reilly's teaching and research focus on professional writing theory and pedagogy; electronic composition, citation, and publication; computer gaming and literacy; distance learning; and the intersections of genders, sexualities, and technologies.

   
Courses Taught  

ENG 204: Introduction to Professional Writing

ENG 313: Writing about Science

ENG 314: Writing and Technology

ENG 319: Document Design

ENG 496: Senior Seminar in Writing and Rhetoric

 
   
Major Publications  
  • “Bibliographic Entries and Usability: Teaching Citation of Electronic Sources” Rhetorically Rethinking Usability: Theories, Practices, and Methodologies. Eds. Susan Kay Miller and Shelley Rodrigo. Creskill, NJ: Hampton Press. (forthcoming)
  • with Douglas Eyman. “Multifaceted Methods for Multimodal Texts: Alternate Approaches to Citation Analysis for Electronic Sources” Digital Writing Research: Technologies, Methodologies, and Ethical Issues. Eds. Dànielle Nicole DeVoss and Heidi A. McKee. Creskill, NJ: Hampton Press, 2007. 353-75.
  • with Douglas Eyman. “Revising with Word Processing/Technology/Document Design.” Revision: History, Theory, and Practice. Eds. Alice Horning & Anne Becker. Reference Guides to Rhetoric and Composition Series. Ed. Charles Bazerman. Parlor Press and WAC Clearinghouse, 2006. 102-16.
  • with Joseph John Williams. “The Price of Free Software: Labor, Ethics, and Context in Distance Education.” Computers and Composition: An International Journal for Teachers of Writing 23 (2006): 68-90.

 

  • Sexualities and Technologies: How Vibrators Help to Explain Computers.” Computers and Composition: An International Journal for Teachers of Writing 21 (2004): 363-85. 

 



Maintained by K. Newlin ( ) | About this Site | Copyright Notice |
Sunset
UNCW/Jamie Moncrief