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Showing 1 to 15 of 41 results
Geller, Anne Ellen; Denny, Harry – Writing Center Journal, 2013
Upon arriving on their first day of work, new writing center professionals (WCPs) may be pleased to find they have inherited well-furnished tutorial spaces or established peer-tutoring courses. be welcomed by supportive, cross-disciplinary writing committees or invested deans. Those who start in their positions as their institutions' first…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Laboratories, School Personnel, Professional Personnel
Bromley, Pam; Northway, Kara; Schonberg, Eliana – Writing Center Journal, 2013
Much writing center assessment literature focuses on the deep importance of local, institutional context. Still, a tension exists in the field more generally, and in assessment research specifically, between a reliance on local practice and a reliance on shared lore (Driscoll and Perdue; Thompson et al.). This tension can be fruitfully examined…
Descriptors: Laboratories, Writing Assignments, Exit Examinations, College Students
DeCheck, Natalie – Writing Center Journal, 2012
Andrea, a doctoral student in education, has a demanding schedule. She has a young child, a job, a house on the market, and a spouse who travels so much that she can only see him on certain weekends. To cope with these unavoidable distractions to her research, she found the writing center and was paired with a fellow graduate student, Charisse.…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Motivation, Tutoring, Case Studies
Raymond, Laurel; Quinn, Zarah – Writing Center Journal, 2012
The writing center where the authors were trained and currently work emphasizes the model of non-directive, writer-based peer tutoring in which, as Jeff Brooks puts it, tutors "make the student the primary agent in the writing center session." As undergraduate peer tutors, they recognize that some students come into their writing center with goals…
Descriptors: Writing Processes, Laboratories, Tutors, Peer Teaching
Bibb, Bethany – Writing Center Journal, 2012
Because writing centers have long been viewed as fix-it shops, mentioning the word "grammar" can spark a heated debate over the writing center's role. A brief history of the most recent grammar wars begins with researchers in the 1960s who found that "formal grammar has a negligible or, because it usually displaces some instruction and practice in…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Laboratories, Tutoring, Teaching Methods
Driscoll, Dana Lynn; Perdue, Sherry Wynn – Writing Center Journal, 2012
In the last 15 years, writing center scholars have increasingly called for more evidence to validate writing centers' practices. Work by Paula Gillespie (2002), Neal Lerner (2009), and Isabelle Thompson et al. (2009) underscore this need. Missing from these discussions, however, is a thorough understanding of the past and current research…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Laboratories, Scholarship, Research Methodology
Conard-Salvo, Tammy; Spartz, John M. – Writing Center Journal, 2012
This is a story of a failed study. In 2007, the authors set out to demonstrate that Kurzweil 3000, an adaptive text-to-speech software program, would help any student revise with its read-aloud function and numerous writing tools. During the course of the study, the authors confronted their misconceptions about students' technology use and…
Descriptors: Assistive Technology, Computer Software, Technology Uses in Education, Laboratories
Wolfe, Joanna; Griffin, Jo Ann – Writing Center Journal, 2012
This study directly compares face-to-face writing center consultations with two closely related variations of Online Writing Instruction (OWI). Although the study takes place in a busy, dynamic writing center, the authors try to make their comparisons as systematic as possible so they can better foreground some of the benefits and disadvantages of…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Online Courses, Computer Assisted Instruction, Best Practices
Severino, Carol; Deifell, Elizabeth – Writing Center Journal, 2011
Writing center tutors play a key role in advancing L2 writers' language learning because the tutorial interaction involves the introduction of new language and vocabulary at the point of need or interest. This tutor-research case study presents a detailed, complex portrait of how a second language writer in a US writing center learned and used…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Second Language Learning, Tutors, Vocabulary Development
Corbett, Steven J. – Writing Center Journal, 2011
This essay presents case studies of "course-based tutoring" (CBT) and one-to-one tutorials in two sections of developmental first-year composition (FYC) at a large West Coast research university. The author's study uses a combination of rhetorical and discourse analyses and ethnographic and case study multi-methods to investigate both the scenes…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Research Universities, Tutors, Case Studies
Hughes, Bradley; Gillespie, Paula; Kail, Harvey – Writing Center Journal, 2010
Through the Peer Writing Tutor Alumni Research Project (PWTARP), the authors have set out to explore and document what peer tutors take with them from their training and experience. The Peer Writing Tutor Alumni Research Project has made it possible for the authors to sample and analyze more systematically the reflections of 126 former tutors from…
Descriptors: General Education, Research Projects, Alumni, Tutors
Davis, Kevin M.; Hayward, Nancy; Hunter, Kathleen R.; Wallace, David L. – Writing Center Journal, 2010
Tutoring and conferencing have assumed important instructional roles as composition theory and practice have shifted from product-centered to process-centered approaches. The benefits of conferencing (Reigstad), of peer tutoring (Bruffee), of professional tutoring (Franke), and of group collaboration (Nystrand) have been presented and supported.…
Descriptors: Tutoring, Conferences (Gatherings), Role, Laboratories
Thompson, Isabelle; Whyte, Alyson; Shannon, David; Muse, Amanda; Miller, Kristen; Chappell, Milla; Whigham, Abby – Writing Center Journal, 2009
During their rapid growth in the 1970s and 1980s, writing centers came to depend on "lore," what Stephen North defines as "knowledge about what to do," based on practice and inherited by one generation of practitioners from the previous one. This lore has been codified as "cherished beliefs," "default(s)," or the "bible." Codified writing center…
Descriptors: Laboratories, Writing (Composition), Tutors, Role
Severino, Carol; Swenson, Jeffrey; Zhu, Jia – Writing Center Journal, 2009
Writing center tutors have traditionally been trained to use indirect, dialogic methods of tutoring and to attend to global concerns such as argumentation and organization--practices based more on experience tutoring native rather than non-native speakers of English. Lately, however, tutors have also been encouraged to respond to non-native…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Delivery Systems, Speech Communication, Second Language Learning
Peer reviewedMorrison, Julie Bauer; Nadeau, Jean-Paul – Writing Center Journal, 2003
Uses follow-up telephone calls to writing center visitors to determine whether their level of satisfaction with writing center services had remained the same over time. Indicates that when students learned of their grades, they altered their previous perceptions of their writing sessions. Suggests a seemingly positive tutoring session can result…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Higher Education, Student Attitudes, Student Evaluation

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