CLUE WRITING CENTER BASICS

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Ms. Spurr-MacKay’s Writing 110 Class. Writing Overview As senior high students, you are assumed to have mastered the knowledge and skills of previous.
Advertisements

 Take Roll  Discussion – BA 8  Questions?  Tips for revising the introduction  Workshop Time  Homework for next week.
REVISION CM103 Unit 8.
What is “College Writing”? Getting the Most Out of TS English Fall Quarter.
The Writing Centre, StFX University How to Benefit Most from a Writing Centre Appointment Adapted from the resources of Purdue University
Looking at Texts from a Reader’s Point of View
Welcome to ACC’s Writing Center. Students in distance education classes and seated classes have the same options for Writing Center assistance. The Writing.
The Writing Center St. Joseph’s Hall, 3 rd Floor, Room
Math TLC Tutor Lab Overview: All sections of Math 010 and 110 are taught in a single, dedicated, technology-enhanced classroom that is adjacent to a.
THE WRITING CENTER HELPING YOU HELP YOUR STUDENTS THROUGH WORKSHOPS, TIP SHEETS, AND TUTORING.
Think. Learn. Succeed. Preparing International Students to Meet Academic Writing Challenges Melissa Allen Coordinator of Support Services for Non-Native.
February 28, 2008The Teaching Center, Washington University The Teaching Citation Program & Creating a Teaching Portfolio Beth Fisher, Ph.D. Assistant.
Chapter 23 Writing Portfolios. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.23 | 2 Chapter overview Looks at the use of portfolios, as well.
The Call to Write, Third edition Chapter 23, Writing Portfolios.
Welcome! Hello and welcome to English Composition 102, Introduction to Literature. I am looking forward to exploring, writing, and discussing literature.
Introduction to Academic Writing. Welcome to the class! What is “academic writing”? Course & Assignment Design.
Welcome to NU 304 Instructor: Kelley Edds, MSN, APN-BC.
Welcome to English 101. To Do List for Today: Go over syllabus Discuss turnitin accounts and course website Prepare for success in Eng 101 Discuss the.
Welcome To Unit 2 Introduction to Writing Skills and Strategies.
Writing Support at the University of Washington Adiam Tesfay and Chelsie Doherty (CLUE) and Jenny Halpin (OWRC)
How to Be Successful in English What to Do the First Week O Get the book – either hard cover or e-book O Read the Orientation Materials O Watch.
Writing and Information Literacy. General Writing Advice Understand the assignment. Be honest with your instructor if this is the first time you’ve encountered.
Welcome! Let’s get started…
Due Electronically Friday, June 7th by Midnight
Due Electronically (Canvas) Wednesday, June 10 by 11:59 pm
02086 Writing Inspirations Aalto University
By: Mary Hunnicutt February 13, 2017
Due Electronically Sunday, December 8th by Midnight
Presented by The GSC Peer Mentors
The Purdue Writing Lab A Quick Tour
02086 Writing Inspirations Aalto University
Welcome to the Write Place
The NMSU Writing Center
An Introduction to the Graduate Writing Center (GWC) Academic Support Programs Academic Support Programs, Campus Center
The NMSU Writing Center
Research, Writing, and Presentation Support for Students
The NMSU Writing Center
The 131 Portfolio Transforming the Outcomes from abstract statements to demonstrable skills.
02086 Writing Inspirations Aalto University
Course name: Weekly Planning
Composition Class Portfolio Workshop II:
English 131 Portfolio Due Electronically Wednesday, March 16th, 5pm!
What Does Research Tell Us About the Teaching and Learning of Writing
Online Learning in Agricultural & Life Sciences
RWS 100: Writing Paper #2.
Biology Writing Fellows Orientation Fall 2018
Collin County Community College Spring Creek Campus
Writing Center Introduction
CLUE WRITING CENTER BASICS
Introduction to the NSU Write from the Start QEP
Online Composition with Georgie Ziff
Writing to Learn vs. Writing in the Disciplines
Professional Writing Introduction.
Composition Class Portfolio Workshop I:
Composition Class Portfolio Workshop II:
So What Is The Writing Center?
Writing a Teaching Philosophy Statement
Composition Class Portfolio Workshop I:
Essay #1: Your Goals as a Writer
Tasks & Grades for MET3.
Welcome to ACC’s Writing Center
ENGL 131 Portfolio Breaking it Down.
Carla Vecchiola ICED, June 6th, 2018
Fred Meijer Center for Writing and Michigan Authors
Year 11 Final Countdown Mr Yarwood Principal
New Student Orientation
English 1301 Week 13 November 20, 2017.
CU Activity: Goal Setting .
The Margaret H. Ordoubadian University writing center
The Teacher Work Sample: An Authentic Assessment
Presentation transcript:

CLUE WRITING CENTER BASICS FREE TO YOU! Open Sunday-Thursday (any school night), 7pm-11pm in Mary Gates Hall Drop-in ,45 minute sessions, one-on-one with trained tutors CLUE is multidisciplinary, our tutors are from all different academic backgrounds We welcome sessions to discuss personal statements, applications, letters to your mother and resumes too! (AKA anything in English!) We host a variety of workshops , most popular include: Composition portfolios Résumés/cover letters Personal Statements Conversation groups with English and Education department faculty on Thursday nights Point out the lovely, super calm picture of MGH on the website

ODEGAARD WRITING AND RESEARCH CENTER BASICS Reserve your appointment online! Open Sunday 12:00pm-9:00pm, Monday through Thursday 9:00am-9:00pm, Friday 9:00am-3:00pm Drop-in consultations are also available between 10:30am and 6:30pm Two appointments per week per writer (except during Finals) Multidisciplinary undergraduate and graduate peer tutors from many different fields trained to support you with all kinds of writing – academic to personal Free one-to-one, group tutoring, and writing workshops to help you become more successful and confident as writers over time http://depts.washington.edu/owrc

MORE WRITING CENTERS ACROSS CAMPUS How about visiting the Instructional Center? Must be OMAD student, Departmental Writing Centers: Anthropology, Condon 836 Education, Miller 407C History, Smith 020 Philosophy, Savery 362 Political Science, Law, Societies and Justice, International Studies, Gowen 111 Psychology, Guthrie Annex 4, Room 109 Sociology, Savery 203 A successful student uses all of their resources at different times throughout the research and writing process. A departmental writing center could be the best place to develop genre or department-specific writing skills.

WHAT SHOULD I BRING? 1. Please always bring your prompt! What is a prompt? The instructions given for the assignment or task at hand. Examples of prompts include: Hard-copy assignments, canvas assignments and rubrics, questions to respond to for a personal statement, job description for a resume or cover letter 2. Question: Do I have to have something written already to bring to a writing center? Answer: Nope! We love brainstorming, planning and drafting sessions in the writing center and we hope you will too! 3. If you DO bring in your written work it can be hard-copy or electronic 4. Bring along your favorite way to jot down notes/thoughts 5. QUESTIONS ☺

I loved the writing center, but who can help with my chemistry (or physics, or math, or language, et cetera…? http://depts.washington.edu/aspuw/clue/home/ Maybe show CLUE web-site and scroll through

Composition Class Portfolio Workshop I: Selecting The Right Materials for your Portfolio

Reminder: What is the portfolio? Pay attention to the requirements in your specific class! The portfolio is an evidence-based argument regarding your fulfillment of the course outcomes Every part of the portfolio sh0uld be designed to help you prove to your audience (your writing instructor) that you have done an outstanding job fulfilling the four outcomes

Reminder: What is in the portfolio? Pay attention to the requirements in your specific class! Portfolios (almost) always have the following parts: A Critical Reflection (sometimes called the “Cover Letter”) A “Compendium” of all short and major assignments done during the quarter 3-5 Revised Papers that serve as the “evidence” that you have fulfilled the outcomes

Reminder: What is in the portfolio? The Critical Reflection (or “Cover Letter”) usually includes: An Introduction Several Critical Reflections (organized by paper or by outcome) A Final Reflection The introduction is sometimes assigned as your reflection on your writing before the class. The Final Reflection is sometimes assigned as a forward looking—thoughts about how the skills from the class will transfer to future endeavors. Some instructors give out other specific requirements for the portfolio!

Reminder: What is in the portfolio? The Compendium includes: All the sequence related work (Short and Major Assignments) All assignments must be completed and included to pass the portfolio!

Reminder: What is in the portfolio? The Revised Papers include: 3-5 Revised assignments (including at least one major assignment)

Owning the language of the portfolio assignment and outcomes Go over the language of the outcomes carefully and follow-up with your instructor about parts you don’t understand. If your instructor has a rubric for grading the portfolio, spend time reviewing this rubric (See also the rubric on page 399 of Writer/Thinker/Maker if you have that textbook)

Collecting and Selecting Take your time and think about which papers you will revise Think about your papers “holistically” (You are now working with your papers as body of work that demonstrates the outcomes, not just papers that satisfy an individual assignment) You want to be able to show papers that demonstrate how your writing weaves different outcomes together to achieve different writing goals

Revising Keep in mind that you can revise your papers in ways that better help you demonstrate the outcomes! Keep the outcomes nearby as you revise, and make a note of places that you can use as evidence that you have fulfilled various parts of the outcomes.

Reflecting It is important to keep in mind the following: Show not only WHAT writing strategies and choices you have used to fulfill the outcomes, but explain HOW your writing creates the effects that you say it does and WHY these effects are important and appropriate Consider showing not just the breadth of your writing strategies, but go into detail to show your analytical depth as well. Give examples! Be metacognitive (Show your awareness of your various writing choices in detail!) Breadth is showing all the little (and big) places where you have achieved the outcomes. Analytical depth means you can talk about your writing at-length, showing your metacognition!

Questions and Answers about the Outcomes

Suggestions of writing that would work to demonstrate fulfillment of different outcomes

Suggestions of writing that would work to demonstrate fulfillment of different outcomes

Suggestions of writing that would work to demonstrate fulfillment of different outcomes

Strengths of sample cover letter

Strengths of Sample Writing Regarding: Outcome 2

Weaknesses of Sample Writing Regarding: Outcome 2