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Mike Rose

Professor
Social Research Methodology

2005D Moore Hall

(310) 825 8076

mrose@gseis.ucla.edu

Education

Ph.D., Education, UCLA, 1981

Research Interests

I am generally interested in thinking and learning and the various methods we use to study, foster, and write about them. This interest plays out in six different, but not unrelated, ways:

  1. The study of the factors -- cognitive, linguistic, socio-historical, and cultural -- that enhance or limit people's engagement with written language.
  2. The development of pedagogies and materials to enhance critical reading and writing, particularly at the secondary and post-secondary level, and particularly with "underprepared" or "at risk" populations.
  3. I'm interested in helping graduate students become more reflective about the uses of writing in social research: understanding writing as methodology, its relation to the conceptualization of their projects, and the effects various rhetorical choices have on their readers.
  4. The study of effective teaching, primarily from a cognitive or socio-cognitive perspective.
  5. The study of the cognition involved in various kinds of work, especially the skilled trades -- the problem-solving, trouble-shooting, "informal" reasoning of novice and expert carpenters, plumbers, mechanics, electricians, etc. -- and the interrelation of cognition, skill, and identity.
  6. I'm interested in ways to bridge or combine modes of inquiry. How can we in principled ways rethink the barriers that often exist among disciplines, among methodologies, and among scholarly and non-scholarly languages? What sorts of institutional niches, courses, and opportunities can facilitate this rethinking? What does it mean to be systematic and rigorous when one moves outside of the tradition of a discipline or a scholarly mode of communication? How do we bridge the significant rhetorical and political gap between disciplinary inquiry and the public conversation about educational issues?

Recent Publications

Widening the Lens on Standardized Patient Assessment: What the Encounter Can Reveal about the Development of Clinical Competence (with L. Wilkerson). Academic Medicine, 76 (8), August, 2001.

A Call for the Teaching of Writing in Graduate Education (with K. McClafferty). Educational Researcher, 30 (2), March, 2001.

Literacy: A Critical Sourcebook (with E. Cushman, E. Kintgen, B. Kroll). Boston: Bedford Books of St. Martins Press, 2001.

The Working Life of A Waitress. Mind, Culture, and Activity, 8 (1), 2001.



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