Skip to main content

Home/ WcORD: The WLN Writing Center Online Resource Database/ Group items tagged scholarship

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Lee Ann Glowzenski

Scholarship on Marginalia - 0 views

  •  
    discussion of scholarship related to marginalia (i.e. tutors writing on student papers); also covers policies re: marginalia
mickey130

wpacensus.swarthmore.edu - 0 views

  •  
    The goal of the WPA Census is to create an online database that would serve as a first stop for people to find answers to questions that come up often in writing program administration practice and research.  The WPA Census embodies the idea that the administrative work of WPAs, WCDs, and WAC directors is scholarship. By ultimately providing these directors with a database that catalogs and organizes the diversity of writing programs, the Census will allow researchers to analyze macro- and micro-trends in the landscape of US institutions.
Lee Ann Glowzenski

The Basic Writing E-Journal Issue 12.1 - 0 views

  •  
    Basic Writing e-Journal (BWe) is a peer-reviewed, online, open-access journal. BWe publishes scholarship on teaching and learning in various basic writing contexts. Since basic writing programs often enroll economically disadvantaged students from diverse backgrounds, these students, their teachers, and the policies that influence their access to higher education are often the focus of this journal. Other key topics of concern to BWe readers include curriculum, instructional practice, teacher preparation, program evaluation, and student learning. Additionally, reviews of current scholarly books and textbooks appear regularly in BWe. Currently based at the City College of New York, BWe was founded in 1999 by the Council on Basic Writing (CBW) and continues to be sponsored by CBW.
Lee Ann Glowzenski

Rihn & Sloan 10.2 - "'Rainbows in the past were gay': LGBTQIA in the Writing Center" Pr... - 0 views

  •  
    Includes: APPENDIX: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY OF LGBTQIA/WRITING CENTER SCHOLARSHIP "
Lee Ann Glowzenski

Resources for Tutors on Dialects, Creoles, and Pidgins - 0 views

  •  
    crowdsourcing scholarship for a multiliteracies center
Lee Ann Glowzenski

Writing across cultures: Contrastive rhetoric and a writing center study of one student... - 1 views

  •  
    "As student populations in colleges and universities continue to diversify, composition programs do not always meet students' varying needs. English as a Second Language (ESL) students appear to fail mainstream writing courses at higher rates than their traditional counterparts, yet mainstreaming continues to be mandated, often due to budgetary constraints. Many programs offer multicultural writing courses, but these, too, are often ineffective for many students. Meanwhile, as Paul Kei Matsuda shows, there is a decided split between the disciplines of composition and ESL. Since ESL scholars have a much stronger history of working with diverse student populations than composition scholars do, this study aims to look to ESL scholarship, specifically to contrastive rhetoric, to explore more effective methods of teaching writing to students with varying needs. This case study takes an in-depth look at one student's journey writing across cultures. Ming, a Chinese immigrant who has been in the United States for approximately ten years, is a junior at the University of Rhode Island who struggles with writing. Over the course of one semester, three of her projects were studied in depth. Data include transcripts of audiotaped tutorial sessions in the URI Writing Center, Ming's assignments and papers, and the researcher's notes from interviews with Ming following the tutorial sessions. ^ The new contrastive rhetoric (Connor, Kaplan, Purves) insists that external factors such as culture, education, and media influence the rhetorical patterns writers use. Through a lens of contrastive rhetoric, it becomes clear that most of Ming's difficulties when writing stem from a lack of familiarity with the conventions of U.S. academic discourse or of what her reader expects from her text. The source of much of this is cultural. While Ming's experiences are not generalizable, an in-depth look at her experiences foregrounds some of the issues that contrastive rhetoric addresses, making th
mickey130

WritingLabNewsletter (@WLNewsletter) | Twitter - 0 views

  •  
    Twitter page for the Writing Lab Newsletter (changing, in Sept. 2015, to WLN: A Journal of Writing Center Scholarship). This page posts tweets relevant to writing centers, such as announcements, calls for conference proposals, and news of writing centers. It also follows dozens of other writing center Twitter accounts.
Lee Ann Glowzenski

Writing Centers in Spanish-Speaking Countries - 0 views

  •  
    also discusses lack of Spanish-language WC scholarship
mickey130

SWCA: Southeastern Writing Centers Association - 0 views

  •  
    The SWCA website offers information about  SWCA's mission statement, conferences, institutional members, calendar of events, board, past conferences, president's blog, awards, scholarships, journal, wc resources, news, jobs, cfp's, and elections.
Lee Ann Glowzenski

scholarship about "flow" - 0 views

  •  
    a discussion of resources related to flow"
Tom Halford

From the Editors - 0 views

  •  
    From Praxis: "Welcome to Praxis: A Writing Center Journal. We are a new publication devoted to the interests of writing consultants: labor issues, writing center news, training, consultant initiatives, and scholarship. Because this is a publication whose first issue's theme is "Who We Are," introductions are in order."
mickey130

International Writing Centers Association » Publications - 1 views

  •  
    International Writing Centers Associaition website, list of publications.
1 - 20 of 20
Showing 20 items per page