- Monday-Thurs., 9a-7a
- Friday, 9a-2p
- Phone: 457-5505
- Director: Ethan Krase
- FAQ
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A Guide for Writing Center Tutors:
Section One
The 21st-Century Writing Center: Pedagogy
and Philosophy
1.1 The
Writing Center: Philosophy and Mission
Winona State University's
Writing Center, located at 3rd floor of Minné Hall, offers WSU students free, individualized
instruction in all aspects of writing. The center is staffed primarily by
graduate assistants in English training in composition.
Funded, staffed, and
maintained primarily by WSU's English Department, the Writing Center wishes to
promote literacy in every aspect of academic and cultural life. We hope to
promote the use of academic writing-in all disciplines-as a tool for learning,
communication, self-expression, and critical thinking. To this end, we wish to
work closely with students, faculty, and administrators to help students
become capable, successful writers.
The Writing Center
typically opens the second week of classes each semester and stays open until
the last class day of the term. While daily center hours may vary from
semester to semester, tutors are usually available between 9 a.m. and 7 p.m.
each class day except Friday. An appointment sign-up sheet is posted on the
door each semester.
Students may visit us
once, a few times, or on a regular basis. They may seek help on their own or
appear on the recommendation of a teacher. Students may drop in for help with
their specific assignments-a perfectly legitimate use of our services-yet they
should realize that Writing Center tutors will not proofread and "correct"
their final copy. The responsibility for the final product remains that of the
student writer.
Rather than doing
students' work for them, our tutors help students respond to rhetorical
situations. Tutors discuss topics with writers, offer feedback on developing
drafts of papers, suggest writing strategies, diagnose writing problems, ask
questions, review missing or misunderstood information, listen to writers, and
help them gain perspective on their writing.
Generally, student
writers' individual needs are the focus of our tutorials. Students are
encouraged to set the agenda by articulating their own individual writing
tasks, dilemmas, and questions. Some may study particular writing "problems"
or make use of our handbooks and exercises in mechanics and grammar, but most
come to us with questions about a specific assignment. In addition to help
with essays and term papers, our staff also provides help with résumés, job
applications, letters, pamphlets, and any other writing task with which
students are involved.
Other services we provide
include assisting students in first-year and fundamental writing courses,
working with non-native speakers, and helping students prepare for the
Education Department's writing clearance examination.
1.2 The
Writing Center Director
The
Writing Center Director is a full-time English Department faculty member who
receives release time for assuming such duties. The Director, a member of the
Composition Committee who is voted to the position by the department, is
responsible for the overseeing of Writing Center tutors (including
orientation, training, meetings, etc.); for the managing of the Writing Center
(including scheduling, promotion, maintenance, and supervision); for acting as
a liaison between the Writing Center and the English Department (including
assisting in the solicitation, selection, and supervision of GAs who tutor in
the center); and for acting as a liaison between the Writing Center and the
University.
1.3
Writing Center Procedures & Tutor Responsibilities
Since the Writing Center
offers individualized instruction in all aspects of writing, its mission,
essentially, is to promote the use of academic writing as a tool for learning,
communication, self-expression, and critical thinking. While the Writing
Center does offer some remediation services (to students of English 099 who
fail an exit examination, and to Education students who need preparation for a
clearance test), the Writing Center staff should be prepared to represent the
center as an interdisciplinary service for student writers.
Hours
The center opens the
second week of each semester and stays open until the last class day of the
term. The center is closed during final exams. Daily center hours vary from
semester to semester depending on the availability of qualified tutors, but
tutors are usually on staff from about 9 to 7. Graduate assistant tutors
will be expected to work 10-15 hours a week (those graduate assistants who
are concurrently teaching will be expected to work 5-8 hours a week);
undergraduate interns' hours vary according to the demands of their
individual internships. The schedules of tutors will be determined during
the first week of each term, after academic schedules have been established.
Special Sessions
Writing Center GAs
sometimes sponsor special sessions and/or workshops. Past special sessions
have been geared towards student writers and have addressed concerns of
mechanics, grammar, and documentation; future sessions, while they may
certainly address those issues, may at the same time attempt to establish a
more interdisciplinary understanding of academic writing and may also
involve or address WSU faculty.
The Writing Labyrinth
The Writing Labyrinth
is a regular publication of the Writing Center which addresses concerns of
composition theory and practice, tutoring, and writing-across-the-curriculum
for the university community. The Labyrinth is usually published and
edited by a GA for credit; other GAs are expected to make regular
contributions.
Classroom Visits
Writing Center staff
members often make brief visits to WSU classrooms to distribute brochures,
describe services, promote awareness, and encourage use of the center.
Typically, such visits are to introductory courses, taking place early in
the semester, and they offer students the opportunity to see that Writing
Center staffers are "real people" whose only motivation is helping students
become more capable writers.
Record-Keeping
One of the most
important aspects of the tutor's job is keeping accurate records of the
Writing Center activities. While this work may seem to take time away from
the job of tutoring itself, consistent record-keeping is imperative, since
without such records the Writing Center will have difficulty justifying its
existence or evaluating its performance. Tutors in the Writing center keep
four kinds of records:
1.
Individual
Student Records.
Ask students who are
visiting the center for the first time to complete a "Student Information
Sheet." When you are finished with the session, make a brief notation on
the back of the form concerning the subject of the tutorial, the date, and
your initials. These forms should be left in the work-study "in-box" at
the end of the session; the work-study assistant will enter the records in
a database and file the paper copies for future reference. Students who
have already visited the center this academic year will have their records
on file. For them, you need only complete the appropriate entry on the
back of the form.
Your
description of the session is important. It lets the director know the
content of the sessions, and it helps other tutors quickly assess what a
returning student has focused on or accomplished. Your description need not
be polished or elaborate, but it should be indicative of the session's
content.
2.
Reports to
Instructor.
If a student or instructor has requested (usually, on the front of the
"Student Information Sheet") that the instructor be notified, complete a
"Report to Instructor" form, and leave it in the work-study in-box.
Occasionally, an uninformed instructor or student may request (or "require")
that you "sign off" on a student's paper. In general, these folks are hoping
for a guarantee that the paper is proofread and edited. Don't . Instead,
simply fill out a "report to instructor" form and describe the work done in
the session.
3.
Weekly
Appointment Sheets.
A "Weekly Appointment Sign-up Form" should be put on the door on Monday of
each week. Students can sign up when the center is busy or closed.
Students who have appointments will be given priority over drop-in
students. Please file these appointment sheets at the end of each week.
4.
Student
Evaluations of the Center.
Please ask students if they wish to fill out a "Student Evaluation of the
Center" form after the session. (If students are in a hurry, ask them to
take a form along and drop it off later.) The forms should be collected
and filed daily. They also, of course, should be read.
1.4 Writing Center Materials and Resources
The Writing Center keeps a
wide variety of materials for use by and with student writers, from textbooks
and handbooks to exercise sheets, a library of composition works, computer
programs, and a World Wide Web site.
Shelf Texts
The open shelves in the
center hold a number of recent composition texts, skills workbooks, grammar
handbooks, and programmed texts. Tutors should familiarize themselves with
these materials so that they are able to look up answers to grammatical or
usage questions or recommend exercises or reference materials to students.
There are multiple copies of several of the texts. The center also houses a
number of general reference works from the MLA Style Handbook to a
large thesaurus. Students may use any of these books in the center; however,
they may not be checked out.
Handbooks
We keep a copy of Diana
Hacker's Bedford Handbook for Writers on the main table at all times.
Tutors should be familiar with its contents, and they should be ready to
model for their students ways of using the handbook. (Surprisingly, many
students have little or no idea how to make use of such a resource.)
Exercise Sheets and
Handouts
The center has a number
of exercise sheets and mechanics handouts that students can use and take
with them when they leave the center. Please monitor the usage of these
sheets, and when a useful handout is running low, ask the office assistant
to make more copies. Center tutors should also consider constructing such
short handouts and exercises. If you have a useful exercise or would like to
rework one of those already in the center, please contribute. We are always
in the process of revising and devising materials. Your contribution is
welcome and needed.
The Writing Center Library
In addition to the
general reference works on the open shelves that are available to all
students, the Writing Center maintains a specialized library on texts
related to composition and language learning. These texts are for the use of center tutors, graduate students, and faculty
only. They may be checked out; a sign-out notebook is kept inside the
cabinet. Since the texts are often used by graduate classes, they should not
be checked out for extended periods of time.
Computer Programs
We keep a few computer
programs that might be useful with some students and/or tasks. Among them
are a résumé-writing program, invention and usage drill programs, and online
handbooks. Our computer also features fully networked access to the Internet
and the World Wide Web, as well as word-processing, presentation, and other
software programs. While it is reserved for Writing Center use, it can
certainly be used by graduate students for individual projects.
The Writing Center Web
For students, the
Writing Center Web provides links to Internet search engines, links to
electronic journals and periodicals, handouts on writing, links to writing
reference works, and e-mail tutoring. And for faculty, there are links to
resources for writing across the curriculum, information on using our
services, and an e-mail "hotline" for assistance designing or assessing
writing projects.
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