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Lee Ann Glowzenski

Shouse Dissertation: via Neal Lerner - 0 views

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    "Introduction to Shouse, Claude F. "The Writing Laboratory in Colleges and Universities." Diss. University of Southern California, 1953." Full dissertation available as PDF
Lee Ann Glowzenski

Dissertations and Theses on Writing Centers compiled by Neal Lerner - 0 views

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    a lengthy list of dissertations and theses related to writing centers, last updated July 2010
mickey130

Starting a Dissertation Writing Group (In a Writing Center) - ProfHacker - Blogs - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 1 views

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    Starting a Dissertation Writing Group (In a Writing Center). in CHE, ProfHacker. Offers some models and advice.
Lee Ann Glowzenski

Dissertation Writing Group - 1 views

Lee Ann Glowzenski

Examining Bridges, Expanding Boundaries, Imagining New Identities: The Writing Center as Bridge for Second Language Graduate Writers - 0 views

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    From abstract: "This dissertation theorizes the writing center as bridge-as an institutional resource that supports second language graduate writers as they journey from outside the academy to the inside-including its strengths and limitations, both locally (for these writers at this writing center) and for the field more broadly. I offer the metaphor of the writing center as bridge, both as an alternate writing center identity and therefore as an alternate approach to tutoring, and as an approach that privileges the multiple subject positions that students hold as they use the writing center.  [...] Based on the literature, the experiences of these participants, and my own experiences as a tutor-turned-coordinator, I ultimately argue that nondirective tutoring is rooted in practice with native-English-speaking undergraduates and that this practice so dominates many writing centers' identities that it has left little room for other subject positions, including those of second language graduate writers."
Ros Woodhouse

Academic Phrasebank - 2 views

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    NB This resource was based on a corpus of graduate dissertations. "The Academic Phrasebank is a general resource for academic writers. It aims to provide you with examples of some of the phraseological 'nuts and bolts' of writing organised according to the main sections of a research paper or dissertation (see the top menu ). Other phrases are listed under the more general communicative functions of academic writing (see the menu on the left). The resource should be particularly useful for writers who need to report their research work.The phrases, and the headings under which they are listed, can be used simply to assist you in thinking about the content and organisation of your own writing, or the phrases can be incorporated into your writing where this is appropriate. In most cases, a certain amount of creativity and adaptation will be necessary when a phrase is used.The items in the Academic Phrasebank are mostly content neutral and generic in nature; in using them, therefore, you are not stealing other people's ideas and this does not constitute plagiarism. For some of the entries, specific content words have been included for illustrative purposes, and these should be substituted when the phrases are used.The resource was designed primarily for academic and scientific writers who are non-native speakers of English. However, native speaker writers may still find much of the material helpful. In fact, recent data suggest that the majority of users are native speakers of English. "
Hillary Wentworth

Human-Computer Interface Design for Online Tutoring: Visual Rhetoric, Pedagogy, and Writing Center Websites - 1 views

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    Dissertation on online writing center website design
Hillary Wentworth

Beyond the Lore: A RESEARCH-BASED CASE FOR ASYNCHRONOUS ONLINE WRITING TUTORING - 1 views

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    Dissertation on asynchronous online tutoring. Summarizes the debate b/w asynchronous and synchronous online tutoring and examines several tutoring interactions. Analyzes a thread on the WCenter listserv.
Ros Woodhouse

Re: Activities for helping dissertation writers get "unstuck" - 0 views

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    Rationale for tutor training.
Lee Ann Glowzenski

How to Tutor Grad Students - 1 views

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    questions and answers on tutoring graduate students
Lee Ann Glowzenski

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

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    "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
Lee Ann Glowzenski

Negotiating Linguistic Certainty for ESL Writers at the Writing Center - 0 views

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    From ABSTRACT: "For teaching practices in the Writing Center, the findings raise questions about how writing center pedagogy can empower L2 writers on their language control when the writing consultants have the ultimate control in language and the L2 learners have the inherent uncertainty. While writing center work draws on the advantages of collaborative dialogues and effects better language control for ESL writers based on a sociocultural learning perspective, writing center pedagogy needs to continue reconsidering the needs and beliefs of ESL writers (Blau & Hall, 2002; Powers, 1993). The language issue in ESL writing is not a lower order concern in the writing, but more likely a primary concern for the writer. As also found in this study, when the broader contextual factors such as the focus of writing and writers' beliefs are taken into account, language knowledge and control are not just about linguistic correctness to ESL writer development. In striving to create better writers but not just better writing for any writers, it is crucial for writing centers to continue rethinking their staff training on the topic of language issues with their diverse multilingual clientele who speaks English as a second language."
mickey130

http://comppile.org/wpa/bibliographies/Bib22/Rendleman.pdf - 1 views

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    "The 18 entries in this bibliography summarize select articles and dissertations that focus on the effects of mandatory writing center visits. The entries are divided into two parts: Part 1 presents summaries of studies that emphasize quantitative and qualitative data. Part 2 presents studies that rely on anecdotal evidence and theoretical arguments."
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    Writing centers and mandatory visits, an annotated bibliography, in the WPA-CompPile research bibliography series, July 2013
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