NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 169 results
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Morrison, 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
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Newman, Beatrice Mendez – Writing Center Journal, 2003
Presents three Hispanic students' experiences with the writing center. Suggests that the writing center centers students by helping them find a voice in the academy and by empowering them in ways that traditional institutional authority does not. Lists four ways in which the writing center can help Hispanic students. (SG)
Descriptors: Case Studies, College Students, Higher Education, Mexican Americans
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Dinitz, Sue; Kiedaisch, Jean – Writing Center Journal, 2003
Presents three tutors' contributions to writing center theory. Shows how writing center theory can be enriched by including tutor voices and perspectives. Discusses the importance of including tutors in the construction of writing center theory. (SG)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Theories, Tutors, Writing Laboratories
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Petric, Bojana – Writing Center Journal, 2002
Discusses general issues related to attitudes towards writing, which may be of interest to those working with English-as-a-second-language students, especially students coming from educational settings where writing is not traditionally taught. Presents the practice of the Writing Center at Central uropean University, one of the few centers in…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Higher Education, Student Attitudes, Writing Attitudes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Santa, Tracy – Writing Center Journal, 2002
Examines what happens when writing center directors ask tutors to enter conversation, not just with clients, but with other writing center ractitioners--when tutors move beyond advice and into the professional discourse of writing centers. Suggests that writing centers need to consider a dialogic approach that invites tutors and their disparate…
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Higher Education, Instructional Improvement, Professional Development
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Orr, Susan; Blythman, Margo – Writing Center Journal, 2002
Examines how art and design students' approaches to writing are potentially enriched by their creative approach to design. Suggests ways in which the art and design training could be exploited and used as a resource to produce strategies that work with all students. Concludes the key is to ask students about their creative preferences and build on…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Creativity, Design, Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Barron, Nancy; Grimm, Nancy – Writing Center Journal, 2002
Discusses work the authors did together addressing racial diversity in a writing center. Foregrounds their differences as well as their mutual vision, creating a bumpy ride for readers and interfering with modernist expectation of oherence, yet exposing the seams they think their readers need to see in order to understand how the fabrics of their…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Personal Narratives, Racial Differences, Teacher Collaboration
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Wingate, Molly – Writing Center Journal, 2001
Propose that educators use statistics to show that writing centers help to create a climate where struggling students succeed and successful students excel. Considers how to add "academic culture," something less concrete, to the bottom line. Challenges readers to think about how their writing centers enhance and advance a culture of academic…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Educational Environment, Higher Education, Instructional Improvement
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Bokser, Julie A. – Writing Center Journal, 2001
Continues a discussion of critiquing peer tutoring groups by underscoring a typically unacknowledged component: the way in which an emphasis on "peerness" disguises the inherent aggression in tutoring relationships. Defines "peerness" as a complicated relation that involves power and aggression as well as equality. (SG)
Descriptors: Aggression, Higher Education, Peer Teaching, Teacher Student Relationship
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Weaver, Margaret – Writing Center Journal, 2001
Suggests that students and tutors resist conference summaries because they maintain a hierarchy between student and tutor. Proposes that tutors and students need to embrace the resistance that they feel toward conference summaries and rethink how tutoring sessions are "written up." Concludes that tutors must be willing to believe that students can…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Program Evaluation, Teacher Student Relationship, Tutoring
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Bell, Diana C.; Hubler, Mike T. – Writing Center Journal, 2001
Explores the ways in which mailing list technology help constitute the specific community of the Writing Center. Attempts to contribute to the practical and theoretical needs of writing centers. Concludes that understanding how these virtual spaces function as a significant part of the rhetorical context of writing centers will provide insight…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Higher Education, Listservs, Technological Advancement
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Bell, Jim – Writing Center Journal, 2001
Considers if reflection on practice would be effective as ongoing training of tutors. Discusses the designing of a series of guided reflection exercises and examines the impact. Finds that it is difficult to use guided reflection to foster more reflective thinking by tutors and to change basic tutoring approaches. (SG)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Instructional Improvement, Reflective Teaching, Teacher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Lerner, Neal – Writing Center Journal, 2001
Shows that the reality of Robert Moore and his University of Illinois Writing Clinic is far more complex than previously assumed. Offers a history that is a familiar narrative about the politics of writing centers and writing programs designed to meet the needs of under-prepared students. (SG)
Descriptors: Educational Development, Educational History, Higher Education, Politics of Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Clark, Irene – Writing Center Journal, 2001
Presents the concept of directiveness (regarding the behavior of a consultant/tutor in a writing conference) as a continuum that can be defined in terms of particular characteristics. Examines students' and tutors' attitudes regarding the directiveness of tutors. Finds perceptions between consultants and students differed considerably on a number…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Student Attitudes, Teacher Attitudes, Tutoring
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Thonus, Terese – Writing Center Journal, 2001
Investigates how participant expectations are enacted in tutorial conversations and in self-reported role perceptions. Considers how tutors, tutees, and course instructors perceived the tutor's role. Examines the tensions implicit in expectations they hold of the tutor's role(s), especially as they compare to those of the course instructor. (SG)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Peer Teaching, Student Attitudes, Teacher Attitudes
Previous Page | Next Page ยป
Pages: 1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5  |  6  |  7  |  8  |  9  |  10  |  11  |  12