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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
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Carson, Jay – WPA: Writing Program Administration, 1994
Considers the tremendous growth in writing across the curriculum programs nationwide and the recent questions about the feasibility of such programs. Suggests weaving WAC programs into the existing cultural context of institutions. Analyzes one way this has been achieved at Robert Morris College. (HB)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cultural Context, Higher Education, Program Development
Thompson, Nancy S.; Alford, Elisabeth M. – 1997
A discipline-specific writing center is the nucleus of a writing-in-the-disciplines (WID) program in engineering, in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) at the University of South Carolina. As a writing program, the writing center serves student writers and faculty in ECE and integrates writing consultation into the…
Descriptors: Engineering, Engineering Education, Higher Education, Program Development
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Anson, Chris M. – Assessing Writing, 2006
Writing across the curriculum (WAC) programs had their genesis in grass-roots efforts to promote attention to writing in all disciplinary areas. At first based on generic faculty-development activities with little regard to systemic and institutional concerns, WAC programs are now more often engaged in assessment and research of writing,…
Descriptors: Writing Across the Curriculum, Program Effectiveness, Program Development, Program Implementation
Hamilton-Wieler, Sharon – Education Canada, 1987
"Writing across the curriculum," an educational objective of the 70s, has failed to impress itself as a significant reality on Canada's educators, especially in secondary schools. Reasons for this include a lack of understanding of the concept and its scope within institutions and misconceptions about the English department's role. (JMM)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Foreign Countries, Language Arts, Misconceptions
Shaw, Anamaria Diaz – 1995
Writing Across the Curriculum (WAC) developed around the understanding that writing is a developmental, incremental procedure that is intimately linked to thinking. Two major branches in the WAC movement are the write-to-learn focus, or the push to incorporate writing tasks solely as strategies for teaching and learning course material, and the…
Descriptors: College Role, Community Colleges, Faculty Development, Institutional Mission
Blanchard, Lydia – 1987
An alternative curriculum for Freshman Composition, designed to help students develop cognitive skills useful for academic writing in other courses, involves eight discipline-specific assignments, building from relatively simple writing tasks such as taking lecture notes and keeping an academic journal, through book reports, essay examinations,…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Content Area Writing, Essays, Freshman Composition