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Description
I'm interested in submitting to PUSH, and was wondering if this topic would be of interest to folks: The Potential for Source-Based Composition to Focus Students on Design over Surface Aesthetic.
In teaching document and website design for the paste several years, I've noticed that when students are given WYSIWYG design tools at the start of a project, the visual aesthetic of the site becomes more important than the actual functionality of what they are working on. The tools allow them to move past the fundamentals too quickly, and they lose site of the project as a whole because of their focus on the visualized end product.
When I teach students to compose texts from a source-code level, where the coding of the site is building its structure first and adding in the visuals as a secondary concern, students tend to be more focused on the functionality of the site rather than the end visual result, making for better documents I believe.
In this piece I'd combine my own experience and work with relevant theory and work in the field, including work by Donald A. Norman on design, Mike Monteiro, Ethan Marcotte, and some rhetorical history on Petrus Ramus.