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Sally Jackson
American academic From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Sally Ann Jackson is an American scholar of argumentation, communication, and rhetoric. She is Professor Emerita of Communication at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
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Biography
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Jackson earned all three of her degrees from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and has held faculty positions at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln (1979–1982), Michigan State University (1982–1985), University of Oklahoma (1985–1990), and the University of Arizona (1991–2007). At Arizona she also served in a series of administrative positions, including Vice Provost/Vice President for Learning and Information Technologies and Chief Information Officer. In 2007 she returned to the University of Illinois as a faculty member and Chief Information Officer of the campus.[1] She resigned from the position of CIO in 2011 to protest administrative changes that she feared would harm the Urbana campus' status as a world leader in information technology [2] but remains a faculty member.[3]
The central theme in Professor Jackson's work has been communication design, with specific interests ranging from the natural design of argumentation to highly engineered systems for managing complex human activities.[4] Her work has appeared in Communication Monographs, Communication Theory, Journal of the American Forensic Association, Quarterly Journal of Speech, and Argumentation, among other journals. She has written or co-authored three books.
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Selected awards
- from the National Communication Association:[5]
- Charles Woolbert Research Award, 1995
- Golden Anniversary Monograph Award, 1981
- Outstanding Scholarship Award, Language and Social Interaction Division, 2005
- from the American Forensic Association:[6]
- Daniel Rohrer Memorial Research Award, 1993
- from the International Society for the Study of Argumentation:[7]
- Distinguished Scholar Award, 1997
Selected works
Selected works:[8]
- Aakhus, M., & Jackson, S. (2005). Technology, design, and interaction. In K. Fitch & R. E. Sanders (eds)., Handbook of Language and Social Interaction, (pp. 411-436). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
- Jackson, S., & Brashers, D. E. (1994). Random Factors in ANOVA, Quantitative Applications in the Social Sciences . Newbury Park, CA: Sage.
- Jackson, S., & Wolski, S. (2001). Identification of and adaptation to students' preinstructional beliefs in introductory communication research methods: Contributions of interactive web technology. Communication Education, 50, 189–205.
- Eemeren, F. H. van, Grootendorst, R., Jackson, S., & Jacobs, S. (1993). Reconstructing Argumentative Discourse. Tuscaloosa, AL: University of Alabama.
- Jackson, S. (1992).Message Effects Research: Principles of design and analysis. New York: Guilford.
References
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