Kayla Meyers
Kayla Meyers is a writer, cultural historian, and educator living in Austin, Texas with past lives in Madrid, Spain and Richmond, Virginia. She writes about all things pop culture and contemporary political rhetoric and has published work in academic journals and magazines, including The Journal of Popular Culture. Kayla has presented her work at numerous academic conferences, and worked helped program the 2017 Southeastern American Studies Conference as well as the 2019 SXSW EDU Conference & Festival. She’s been teaching writing and English for over four years with the Well-Trained Mind Academy and have a forthcoming book Who Said What? with The Well-Trained Mind Press.
Kayla Meyers
Kayla Meyers is a writer, cultural historian, and educator living in Austin, Texas with past lives in Madrid, Spain and Richmond, Virginia. She writes about all things pop culture and contemporary political rhetoric and has published work in academic journals and magazines, including The Journal of Popular Culture. Kayla has presented her work at numerous academic conferences, and worked helped program the 2017 Southeastern American Studies Conference as well as the 2019 SXSW EDU Conference & Festival. She’s been teaching writing and English for over four years with the Well-Trained Mind Academy and have a forthcoming book Who Said What? with The Well-Trained Mind Press.
Books by Kayla Meyers
Who Said What?: A Writer's Guide to Finding, Evaluating, Quoting, and Documenting Sources (and Avoiding Plagiarism)
Kayla Meyers, Susan Wise Bauer
E Book
A thorough, accessible guide to research, citation, and source evaluation, designed to assist students growing up in an era of social media, fake news, alternative facts, and information overload.Who Said What?: A Writer's Guide to Finding, Evaluating, Quoting, and Documenting Sources (and Avoiding Plagiarism)
Kayla Meyers, Susan Wise Bauer
Paperback, 2020
A thorough, accessible guide to research, citation, and source evaluation, designed to assist students growing up in an era of social media, fake news, alternative facts, and information overload.