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Enlisting Composition: How First-Year Composition Helped Reorient Higher Education in the GI Bill Era
Author(s) -
Ryan Skinnell
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of veterans studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2470-4768
DOI - 10.21061/jvs.30
Subject(s) - composition (language) , state (computer science) , political science , higher education , world war ii , public administration , de facto , law , art , literature , algorithm , computer science
Composition historians have long argued that writing programs were radically transformed in the post-WWII era as a consequence of GI Bill enrollments. But, rising enrollments in this period were not just the cause of huge expansions in first-year writing programs. Rather, first-year composition helped to bring about huge expansions in higher education. Immediately preceding the introduction of the GI Bill, first-year composition became a de facto curricular requirement for institutions that wanted to be eligible for GI Bill funds. Not surprisingly, there was a wave of institutional transformations near the end of WWII as single-purpose institutions became multi-purpose state colleges to attract the newly established Federal largesse. First-year composition helped facilitate these changes around the country as institutions adopted or reformed first-year offerings to become GI Bill eligible.

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