Members
メンバー

特任講師
コウ イゴウ
Wei-Hao Huang
- 専門分野 :
- rhetoric and composition, prose style, multimodal composition, rhetorical grammar, English for Academic Purposes
- Email :
- whhkou g.ecc.u-tokyo.ac.jp
学歴
Ph.D., English (Rhetoric and Composition), University of Connecticut
プロフィール
[Boyhood Days]
・Reading picture books every day.
[High School]
・Favorite subject: English.
・Hobby: Writing poems in English.
[College]
・English major.
・Four years of literature and linguistics and TESOL.
・Dream: To teach writing.
[Graduate School]
・Major field: Rhetoric and Composition.
・Courses taken: Prose style, nonfiction prose, and creative writing.
・Courses taught: Five years of First-Year Writing and one semester of Introduction to Writing Studies.
A dream come true.
[Now]
・Full-time: Compositionist, formalist, stylist.
・Research interests: Anything stylistic. Latest project: Styles of citation practice.
・Teaching interests: Academic writing and multimodal composition. Teaching philosophy: "What we write about matters; how we write it matters more."
・Downtime: Learning Japanese. Writing poems. Reading picture books.
A full circle.
・Reading picture books every day.
[High School]
・Favorite subject: English.
・Hobby: Writing poems in English.
[College]
・English major.
・Four years of literature and linguistics and TESOL.
・Dream: To teach writing.
[Graduate School]
・Major field: Rhetoric and Composition.
・Courses taken: Prose style, nonfiction prose, and creative writing.
・Courses taught: Five years of First-Year Writing and one semester of Introduction to Writing Studies.
A dream come true.
[Now]
・Full-time: Compositionist, formalist, stylist.
・Research interests: Anything stylistic. Latest project: Styles of citation practice.
・Teaching interests: Academic writing and multimodal composition. Teaching philosophy: "What we write about matters; how we write it matters more."
・Downtime: Learning Japanese. Writing poems. Reading picture books.
A full circle.
学生へのメッセージ
When you are engaging with a particular global issue through the GlobE course or program, let's focus not only on its content, but also on the forms, the styles, and the media through which it is, or can be, composed and circulated. Ask not only the "what" question, but also the "how" question!