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Lee Ann Glowzenski

A Writing Center Intervention - YouTube - 0 views

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    Created by members of the University of Maryland's Writing Center, this video instructs tutors to ask questions that prompt student thinking but direct students when they are struggling.
Lee Ann Glowzenski

Writing Center Tutorial - YouTube - 0 views

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    The members of the University of Mount Union's Writing Center created this instructional video about writing center tutorials. The video runs through a typical tutorial and could be useful for tutors and students to learn how to prepare for and what to expect from a tutorial.
Lee Ann Glowzenski

Collaborating with Libraries - 1 views

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    discussing how to incorporate library instruction into the research process
Lee Ann Glowzenski

Writing Center Video Scenario: The Irate Student - YouTube - 1 views

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    This video, created by members of Oakland University's Writing Center, portrays a frustrated student and a tutor's attempt to calm the student and begin the consultation. The video is not promotional or instructive, but could be used to start a conversation among tutors about how to handle a difficult student.
Lee Ann Glowzenski

Grammar Concerns, LOCs, Grammar Bytes - 1 views

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    a discussion of grammar software usage
Hillary Wentworth

Instructor's Guide for the Online Writing Conference - 1 views

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    Excerpts from the book "The Online Writing Conference," with examples and action steps.
mickey130

Useful Tips | Central European University - 1 views

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    26-minute video lecture by Eszter Timar, at Central European University entitled "How to Improve Your Research Proposal"
Lee Ann Glowzenski

Thesis Statements and Topic Sentences - 0 views

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    a handout from Carnegie Mellon's Global Communication Center that discusses thesis statement and topic sentence construction
mickey130

How to Start or Improve a Podcast - ProfHacker - Blogs - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

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    CHE article in ProfHacker, on how to start or improve a podcast. For writing centers that want to add podcasts on their websites. 
Lee Ann Glowzenski

Writing Lab Newsletter 3.1 (September 1978) - 0 views

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    a report on student self-referrals attributed to advertising; a report from a new WC; review of _English 3200: A Programmed Course in Grammar_ (Joseph C. Blumenthal, HBJ); a WC that offers group instruction; mailing list
Lee Ann Glowzenski

Writing Lab Newsletter 4.4 (December 1979) - 0 views

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    "Are Machines the Answer?" on the benefits on one-on-one human compared to computer interaction; "Evaluation and Instruction"; "Some Tutoring Guidelines," a list of Dos and Don'ts for tutors; mailing list
Lee Ann Glowzenski

Workshop Special Topics - 0 views

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    crowdsourcing a list of topics for workshop instruction
Ros Woodhouse

David Lee's Corpus-based Linguistics LINKS - 0 views

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    This is a valiant attempt at a comprehensive listing of resources and tools that take advantage of corpora. Includes tools for teaching - many useful for English as an Additional Language students - and others that can help students with challenges such as concordances.
Lee Ann Glowzenski

Establish Novelty with Three Rhetorical Moves - 1 views

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    a handout for writers in STEM fields who need to "show how their work is important, relevant and new"
Lee Ann Glowzenski

Syllabus Design, Course for Peer Tutors - 3 views

Lee Ann Glowzenski

The Writing Center Journal 25.1 (2005) 1-85. PDF. - 1 views

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    Via CompPile: "This review-essay of Lee-Ann Kastman Breuch's Virtual Peer Review: Teaching and Learning about Writing in Online Environments focuses on virtual peer review (VPR) and its place in composition pedagogy. Breuch's two main points of interest are what is gained by immersing students in online learning, and what could the composition community lose during the transition. In six chapters, Breuch discusses these ideas respectively: 1) how to distinguish the differences between VPR and face-to-face peer review through the use of remediation, specifically with reference to three characteristics of Computer Mediated Communication (CMC): time, space and interaction; 2) how these dimensions play out in virtual communication and instruction; 3) a more focused analysis of the 'tension' that arises when peer review is placed in the virtual world; 4) the challenges of the ownership of ideas in VPR; 5) other concerns raised about VPR; and 6) how VP can be used in the classroom and other writing contexts, the university Writing Center being one example. [Jennifer Maness] "
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