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Visiting Professor Dr. Cheryl E. Ball; Feb. 15-16, 2016

a woman standing in front of a classroom

Dr. Cheryl E. Ball (center), associate professor of digital publishing studies at West Virginia University, opened her visit in Zachery Koppelmann's ENG 411 Business & Technology Writing class in Hays Hall.

a woman standing in front of a whiteboard

Her talk focused on digital collaborations. She said, 'Comuunication over long distances is hard. Tone, which is so important, is often lost.'

a woman standing in front of a screen

'Think about how you are communicating with groupmates. Different discussion groups communicate differently. The words (used) don't always mean the same thing,' said Ball.

a group of people writing on papers

Ball asked the students present, 'How would you describe this project over dinner to your grandmother? In that situation you cannot use jargon.'

a woman standing in front of a chalkboard

'The glossary (of shared terms) is important for people to know,' said Ball. 'It is a way for you to figure out the stable footing that allows you to communicate with progremmers, but also the public outside.'

a group of people sitting in a classroom

Computers can easily facilitate global group collaborations.

a man standing in front of a large screen

Ball warned students, 'Be careful how you build community.'

a woman standing at a podium

Ball delivered a lecture Monday evening in Baxter Hall titled, 'Digital Publishing as a Liberal Art.'

a woman standing at a podium

As he told of her start as a teenager, Ball said, 'All I had to do was look around, see what needed to be done, and do it. I was good at getting things done. I had great mentors.'

a woman standing at a podium

'Projects came into my field of vision 25 years after I was told to take initiative. Publishing studies brings all of the liberal arts together,' she said.

a woman talking to a man

Ball is also an editor of Kairos, a journal of rhetoric, technology, and pedagogy, the longest continually published peer-reviewed journal on the internet. Here she chats with Terrell Russell '18 (left). Ball says of Kairos, 'It has a rigorous peer-review process. We have to do it to legitimize ourselves. There are three stages to our process: our staff reviews it, the second tier is a collaborative reading by the editorial review board, and the third tier is a one-on-one staff review.'

a woman standing at a podium with a man in front of her

Ben Cramer '17 (right) and Ball share an interest in digital publishing. 'I gather readers by making my work open and accessible. Every video has a transcript, every image has a description. We (Kairos) make everything open and free.'

a woman sitting at a desk

Ball also sat in on Crystal Benedicks' ENG 302 Writing in the Community: Grants & Non-Profits class in Baxter Hall.

a woman in a classroom

She said of grant writing, '(It) is presuading your audience -- not the client -- that you know what you are talking about. Given the resources, what is achievable?'

a group of people sitting at tables in a classroom

'You cannot be a poet when you write a grant, but you do need to leave in the passion...it's how you tell your story.' Professor Benedicks followed, 'It's the exact opposite of academic writing.'

a group of people sitting around a table

Ball said, 'I love talking to classes like this because you are writing for real audiences. The stakes are so high.'

a woman sitting in front of a whiteboard

Here, Dr. Ball listens to Shamir Johnson '17 during the in-class discussion.


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