This issue of Praxis focuses our attentions and intentions on “diversity in the writing center.” This focus seems inherently “good”: diversity is something everyone can, and should, support. We find, however, that this diversity work gets really exciting, unnerving, and potentially frustrating–but still good–when we think about how differences are more than just differences: they become unfair organizers of our lives, providing some of us with fewer opportunities, less insider knowledge, and limited access. Other articles in this issue take up gender, language, culture, physical ability, and learning style. In our piece, we invite you to consider how race intersects with these other differences, influencing “deeply embedded logics and patte...
The perception of diversity and inclusion, as it relates to social justice, often evokes destructive...
Though the conversation about race and racism in individual writing centers has developed in the las...
For many, the word diversity has become synonymous with statistical representations of race, class, ...
This issue of Praxis focuses our attentions and intentions on “diversity in the writing center.” Thi...
This article has its origins in relationship: in a group of writing teachers/tutors all similarly co...
For a special Spring 2019 issue, Praxis: A Writing Center Journal welcomes submissions related to t...
Writing centers increasingly have been concerned with issues of race and racism in the center. Howev...
Over the past 10-15 years, writing center scholars have acknowledged the significance of race to wri...
People of color are expected to approach diversity work in a dissociated and intellectual manner by ...
Writing center work has long been haunted by the mandate to either fix the writing or fix the writer...
Antiracist writing centers work towards inclusivity, and thus resist and transgress narratives that ...
Like many universities, Kent State University’s Stark campus has taken “embracing diversity” as one ...
he article describes the process that four writing center consultants took to design and implement ...
We were asked to talk about the state of the field at this moment in time, this mid-pandemic moment ...
The purpose of this qualitative study was to better understand genera-tion 1.5 student perceptions o...
The perception of diversity and inclusion, as it relates to social justice, often evokes destructive...
Though the conversation about race and racism in individual writing centers has developed in the las...
For many, the word diversity has become synonymous with statistical representations of race, class, ...
This issue of Praxis focuses our attentions and intentions on “diversity in the writing center.” Thi...
This article has its origins in relationship: in a group of writing teachers/tutors all similarly co...
For a special Spring 2019 issue, Praxis: A Writing Center Journal welcomes submissions related to t...
Writing centers increasingly have been concerned with issues of race and racism in the center. Howev...
Over the past 10-15 years, writing center scholars have acknowledged the significance of race to wri...
People of color are expected to approach diversity work in a dissociated and intellectual manner by ...
Writing center work has long been haunted by the mandate to either fix the writing or fix the writer...
Antiracist writing centers work towards inclusivity, and thus resist and transgress narratives that ...
Like many universities, Kent State University’s Stark campus has taken “embracing diversity” as one ...
he article describes the process that four writing center consultants took to design and implement ...
We were asked to talk about the state of the field at this moment in time, this mid-pandemic moment ...
The purpose of this qualitative study was to better understand genera-tion 1.5 student perceptions o...
The perception of diversity and inclusion, as it relates to social justice, often evokes destructive...
Though the conversation about race and racism in individual writing centers has developed in the las...
For many, the word diversity has become synonymous with statistical representations of race, class, ...