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Home/ WcORD: The WLN Writing Center Online Resource Database/ Contents contributed and discussions participated by Lee Ann Glowzenski

Contents contributed and discussions participated by Lee Ann Glowzenski

Lee Ann Glowzenski

student requests for specific gender peer tutor - 0 views

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    discussing appropriateness of accommodating requests for same-sex tutors discussion continues: http://lyris.ttu.edu/read/messages?id=19034204
Lee Ann Glowzenski

Peer Tutors' Grades - 0 views

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    a discussion of GPA requirements see also: http://lyris.ttu.edu/read/messages?id=21235331
Lee Ann Glowzenski

WAC Resources for Faculty - 0 views

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    crowdsourcing a list of resources
Lee Ann Glowzenski

guides to conducting ethnographic research - 0 views

Lee Ann Glowzenski

Instructor-Consultants - 0 views

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    discussing policies related to staff consultants who also teach composition
Lee Ann Glowzenski

Fatal Flaws policies - 0 views

Lee Ann Glowzenski

WAC/WID: History - 0 views

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    crowdsourcing materials related to writing in history courses
Lee Ann Glowzenski

Student Traffic Numbers - 0 views

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    crowdsourcing numbers of sessions held and numbers of unique visitors
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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