WPA: WRITING PROGRAM ADMINISTRATION publishes articles and essays concerning the organization, administration, practices, and aims of college and university writing programs. Possible topics include writing faculty education, training, and professional development; writing program creation and design, the development of rhetoric and writing curricula; writing assessment within programmatic contexts advocacy and institutional critique and change; writing programs and their extra-institutional relationships with writing's publics; technology and the delivery of writing instruction within programmatic contexts; WPA and writing program histories and contexts; WAC / ECAC / WID and their intersections with writing programs; the theory and philosophy of writing program administration issues of professional advancement and WPA work; and projects that enhance WPA work with diverse stakeholders. CONTENTS OF WPA 47.2 (Spring 2024): From the Editors: Gratitude, Greetings, and Gatherings by Tracy Ann Morse, Patti Poblete, Wendy Sharer, and Kelly Moreland EVERYTHING IS PRAXIS: Using Case Studies for Training WPAs in SLW Issues: A Dialogic Exploration by Anuj Gupta, Gail Shuck, and Christine M. Tardy Moving Away from ACT for Placement: A Three-Year Journey to Implementing Directed Self-Placement by Heather N. Hill ESSAYS 2023 CWPA Conference Keynote: Students' Right to Their Own Language: The Gordian Knot of Social Justice for Writing Program Administrators by Dominic DelliCarpini Exclusive of Ourselves: Private Multilingualisms in the Writing Center by Lizzie Hutton Where Have You Been? Where are You Going?: Reconsidering Literacy Narratives in the Context of Neuroscience Research by Irene Clark Scarier Than It Seems: Multimodal Composition in GTA Training by Ryan P. Shepherd, Rachael A. Ryerson, and Courtney A.
Mauck BOOK REVIEWS: Practical Perspectives for The New Work of Writing Across the Curriculum: Diversity and Inclusion, Collaborative Partnerships, and Faculty Development: A Review by Lauren Fusilier Review of Radiant Figures: Visual Rhetorics in Everyday Administrative Contexts by Skyler Meeks.