Arguing Academic Merit: Meritocracy and the Rhetoric of the Personal Statement

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Bibliographic Details
Authors and Corporations: Alvarez, Steven
In: Journal of Basic Writing, 31, 2012, 2, p. 32-56
published:
City University of New York
Media Type: Article, E-Article

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further information
Physical Description: 32-56
ISSN: 0147-1635
published in: Journal of Basic Writing
Language: English
Collection: sid-55-col-jstoras14
JSTOR Arts & Sciences XIV Archive
Table of Contents

<p>This article presents a pedagogical model for a sequence of first-year composition (FYC) assignments that encourages students' first-hand interpretations as insiders into the workings of educational meritocracy. I focus on how students negotiate the personal statement, an institutionally privileged genre for the discovery and definition of individual differences, characteristics, and aptitudes. I offer a Bourdiesian model of analysis of the rhetorical tactics students use to legitimate their cultural capital as academic merit. The tactics students enact become topoi for their own rhetorical analyses and arguments, which prove significant when competing for institutional resources.</p>