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Blumner, Jacob S. – 2000
This paper addresses the culture of writing in higher education from a multicultural perspective of those within the "monolith." The paper first notes that writing programs, more specifically writing across the curriculum (WAC), and writing centers work in similar ways by benefiting each other and sharing the broad mission of improving…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Higher Education, Program Development, Writing Across the Curriculum
Runciman, Lex – 1996
What happens in a writing center is always directly linked to a particular curriculum. If the "old regime" featured a 2-course writing requirement, the writing center director generally teaches in the English department and the center works closely to support composition and technical writing and advanced composition sections. Student writers may…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Faculty Development, General Education, Higher Education
Dobie, Ann B. – 1998
A study examined the relationship between Writing Centers and Writing-across-the-Curriculum (WAC) programs--central to the study was a survey designed to determine how writing programs are generally organized in higher education and how effective the people administering them judge them to be. The survey gathered information from 26 writing…
Descriptors: English Departments, Higher Education, Interprofessional Relationship, National Surveys
Gale, Charlotte – 2001
This paper explains why a comprehensive Writing across the Curriculum (WAC) program at the author/educator's university, the University of the Sciences in Philadelphia (USP), would encounter strong opposition. The paper first points out that the author, as the director of the University's Writing Center, has tried for 7 years to make a WAC program…
Descriptors: College Environment, Higher Education, Institutional Characteristics, Professional Education
Duncan, Kathryn – 1994
The potential for writing across the curriculum programs to oppress or to liberate students lies in the dualistic approach to such programs: (1) highlighting humanism, where writing is seen as enhancing the learning process in all academic disciplines, and (2) teaching the conventions of different communities. Few scholars would object to the…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Discourse Modes, Higher Education, Standard Spoken Usage
Powers, Judith K. – 1993
Last year, the Writing Center at the University of Wyoming saw a 100% increase in conferences held with graduate student research writers. Reactions of writing center staff to this development were not entirely positive because: (1) writers came with documents that were too long to discuss in a 30-minute conference and still expected a "quick…
Descriptors: Cooperation, Doctoral Dissertations, English (Second Language), Graduate Students
Stanley, Linda – 1990
A writing across the curriculum program at Queensborough Community College in New York began its work on campus as Writing and Reading in the Technologies (WRIT) and chose to work with the Electrical and Computer Engineering Technology (ECET) department. The program's implementation was two-tiered. In Tier 1, over a period of three years, the WRIT…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Interdisciplinary Approach, Technical Writing, Two Year Colleges
Lowe, Kelly Fisher – 1998
This paper looks at the role of a Writing Program Administrator, and applies the idea of a cybernetic system to the administration of the program. In this cybernetic model, the Writing Program Administrator (WPA) works as both a problem solver and problem causer, with the responsibility of keeping the program in proper balance. A cybernetic…
Descriptors: Administrative Principles, Administrator Effectiveness, Administrator Role, Cybernetics
Jeney, C. J. – 1996
Students are advised to enroll in WAC 101--a writing across the curriculum "Stretch" course--based upon SAT scores. Two types of "at risk" English composition students usually comprise a WAC 101 Stretch class. The first type are the familiar students who are underprepared for college writing courses, while the second are…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, High Risk Students, Higher Education, Journal Writing
Greene, Ghussan R. – 1995
The location of a university writing center is not as important as whether the faculty responsible for the center have a clear picture of how they would like the center to be viewed by the students. A campus writing center should be the hub of all academic writing across the campus. For one instructor, the first lab he developed at a small college…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Computer Software, Computer Uses in Education, Higher Education
Dittmer, Allan; And Others – 1988
The subject of this panel presentation was a collaborative effort to improve writing instruction around the state of Kentucky, which resulted in the funding of several National Writing Project sites, regional workshops, and a competitive grants program to encourage middle and high school classroom teachers to develop innovative writing projects in…
Descriptors: Educational Cooperation, Grants, Inservice Teacher Education, Institutional Cooperation