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Beth A. Towle – Writing Center Journal, 2024
First-generation students (FGS) make up a significant percentage of college populations. However, they experience hardships that are less common for their continuing-generation peers. They struggle to understand the "rules" of college and lack the cultural capital that can help students succeed through generations of knowledge about how…
Descriptors: First Generation College Students, Writing (Composition), Laboratories, Outreach Programs
Tetyana Bychkovska; Susan Lawrence – Writing Center Journal, 2024
A large body of literature on writing center pedagogy suggests that serving multilingual student writers requires approaches different from those developed for native English-speaking students, a difference that may pose unique challenges to tutors. To identify and address these challenges, we elicited tutors' perspectives on their work with…
Descriptors: College Students, Writing Instruction, Tutors, Writing (Composition)
Agustina Carando; Claire J. Lozano – Writing Center Journal, 2024
This study analyzes the experiences of undergraduate peer-tutors in a heritage language writing center (HLWC) located at a large public university in the United States. As former heritage language (HL) students themselves, tutors have to navigate the complexities of being bilingual advocates for their tutees while promoting the linguistic ideals…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Public Colleges, Peer Teaching, Native Language
Lucy Bryan Malenke; Laura K. Miller; Paul E. Mabrey III; Jared Featherstone – Writing Center Journal, 2023
Writing center scholars have long debated whether writers are best served by "generalist" tutors trained in writing center pedagogy or "specialist" tutors with insider knowledge about a course's content or discipline-specific discourse conventions. A potential compromise that has emerged is training tutors in the purposes and…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Laboratories, Writing Instruction, Tutors
Lizzie Hutton; Kate Francis; Danielle Hart; Anita Long; Brenda Tyrrell – Writing Center Journal, 2023
Especially in the wake of the recent pandemic, asynchronous consulting has become increasingly central to writing center work. Yet writing center scholarship has little attended to the significant impact writer input can have on asynchronous writer-consultant exchanges. Drawing on asynchronous consultation data collected before and after our 2019…
Descriptors: College Students, Writing (Composition), Writing Evaluation, Laboratories
Saurabh Anand – Writing Center Journal, 2024
This piece informs my journey of thinking and contextualizing the validity of autoethnography as a decolonial qualitative research method in writing center scholarship. This piece provides the lilt of everyday writing center initiatives, labor, and workings using five email exchanges as data depicting my interactions with various writing center…
Descriptors: Laboratories, Writing (Composition), Professional Personnel, Tutors
Loren Maria Guay – Writing Center Journal, 2023
In this hybrid essay, I engage creatively with the illusory nature of contingent work, presenting three episodes from my personal experiences as a contingent writing program administrator (WPA) during the COVID-19 pandemic. At the same time, I interrogate these experiences by building on past critiques of "comfortable" writing centers,…
Descriptors: Laboratories, Writing (Composition), Administrators, COVID-19
Carol Severino – Writing Center Journal, 2023
It is crucial for writing center professionals who discuss community to ask ourselves what we mean by the term as applied to writing centers. In this keynote, I explore various notions of community that are influenced by writing center growth, expansion, and complexity, especially in relation to Iowa's writing center. After relating a personal…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), Laboratories, Community
Kendon Kurzer; Anna Hayden; Jennifer Nguyen – Writing Center Journal, 2023
Many higher education institutions offer drop-in tutoring programs hosted by writing specialists to support struggling students while others may also/alternatively embed tutors directly into courses. In this quasi-experimental study, we compared survey results from 100 students in basic/developmental courses that featured embedded peer tutors with…
Descriptors: Tutoring, Tutors, Writing (Composition), Instructional Effectiveness
Amy T. Cicchino; Katharine H. Brown; Christopher Basgier; Megan Haskins – Writing Center Journal, 2022
Social justice movements, especially Black Lives Matter, inspired many writing center administrators to reflect on their commitments to antiracism and engage with antiracist professional development with their staff. However, there is continued need to study the impact antiracist professional development has on writing center consultants' ability…
Descriptors: Racism, Social Justice, Professionalism, Writing (Composition)
Beth Sabo; Kaia-Marie A. Bishop; Kristine M. Gatchel; Rachel Dick – Writing Center Journal, 2023
Despite comprising the majority of labor in higher education in general and writing centers more specifically, contingent workers' voices and experiences have often been overlooked. The contingent voices that have been represented have predominantly been those in director or administrative positions, not the professional tutors who engage in…
Descriptors: Tutors, Professional Personnel, Ethnography, Laboratories
Glenn Hutchinson; Xuan Jiang; Mario Avalos – Writing Center Journal, 2023
This essay aims to build upon the Peer Writing Tutor Alumni Research Project (PWTARP), designed by Bradley Hughes, Paula Gillespie, and Harvey Kail (2010), which focuses on what tutors learn about themselves as writers and students. However, the PWTARP survey, like much of writing center scholarship, focuses on student workers attending PWIs…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Writing Teachers, Tutors, Temporary Employment
William E. De Herder III – Writing Center Journal, 2024
This article offers articulation theory as a tool for listening and thinking about the culture in and around writing centers. After defining a method of articulation analysis that considers articulation, disarticulation, and rearticulation, as well as alignments, contradictions, and tensions within a context, the article performs an articulation…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Laboratories, Articulation (Education), Alignment (Education)
Riley N. Dandurand – Writing Center Journal, 2023
In the field of writing center research there is a paucity of information regarding tutoring students with dyslexia. This comes as no surprise considering it is only in the last 50 years that there has been a conscious effort to include those who have exceptionalities in all areas of education. In addition to a lack of research and training there…
Descriptors: Laboratories, Writing (Composition), Students with Disabilities, Tutoring
Xuan Jiang; Jennifer Peña; Feng Li – Writing Center Journal, 2022
This mixed methods study examines whether veteran-novice mentorship between tutors, as part of continuous in-service professional development, would have a positive effect on either party's transferable skills (e.g., communication, collaboration, and professionalism). Quantitative findings from pre- and postsurveys about the veteran--novice…
Descriptors: Tutors, Professional Development, Novices, Mentors