When students walk into a writing center—online or onsite—they reverse the dynamics and politics of traditional pedagogy. Drafts in hand, whether confident or confused about their writing tasks, the second they set foot in writing center space, students seize agency for their success as writers. That matters tremendously because it disrupts the story of how writing instruction should happen. As writing center workers, we know a big unspoken truth that forms a conundrum of institutional life: that the instructors who are nominally responsible for teaching writing, whether in English classes or other disciplines, often ignore, renege on, or simply reject the responsibility of teaching writing. In other words, the story of teaching writing in ...
Writing Centers at the Center of Change looks at how eleven centers, internationally, adapted to cha...
Not surprisingly to those of us with our feet firmly planted in writing center work, the theories we...
Every year, even as I strive to become more authoritative as a scholar and find my voice as an autho...
Writing center work has long been haunted by the mandate to either fix the writing or fix the writer...
The CFP for this spring 2007 issue of Praxis invites us to consider the writing center and the class...
Writing centers are often perceived as places where student writing is “corrected” and “fixed”. Writ...
Over the past twenty-five years, most post-secondary institutions in the United States have establis...
In “Decisions…Decisions: Who Chooses to Use the Writing Center?” Lori Salem (2016) argues that writi...
We here at Praxis are delighted to bring you our Spring 2017 issue, “Rethinking the Writing Center.”...
Journals like Praxis repeatedly demonstrate that writing centers are constructive spaces where stud...
When writing centers change administrative and supervisory staff, sometimes the identity of the writ...
This dissertation centers on the value of work in the institution and composition and rhetoric in th...
In Praxis issues of the recent past, we (Kiara and Kaitlin) have aimed to shine a light on the many ...
Over twenty years ago, Stephen North began his famous essay, “The Idea of a Writing Center,” by adm...
Essays about faculty, student, and administrator misperceptions are nearly as old as Writing Center ...
Writing Centers at the Center of Change looks at how eleven centers, internationally, adapted to cha...
Not surprisingly to those of us with our feet firmly planted in writing center work, the theories we...
Every year, even as I strive to become more authoritative as a scholar and find my voice as an autho...
Writing center work has long been haunted by the mandate to either fix the writing or fix the writer...
The CFP for this spring 2007 issue of Praxis invites us to consider the writing center and the class...
Writing centers are often perceived as places where student writing is “corrected” and “fixed”. Writ...
Over the past twenty-five years, most post-secondary institutions in the United States have establis...
In “Decisions…Decisions: Who Chooses to Use the Writing Center?” Lori Salem (2016) argues that writi...
We here at Praxis are delighted to bring you our Spring 2017 issue, “Rethinking the Writing Center.”...
Journals like Praxis repeatedly demonstrate that writing centers are constructive spaces where stud...
When writing centers change administrative and supervisory staff, sometimes the identity of the writ...
This dissertation centers on the value of work in the institution and composition and rhetoric in th...
In Praxis issues of the recent past, we (Kiara and Kaitlin) have aimed to shine a light on the many ...
Over twenty years ago, Stephen North began his famous essay, “The Idea of a Writing Center,” by adm...
Essays about faculty, student, and administrator misperceptions are nearly as old as Writing Center ...
Writing Centers at the Center of Change looks at how eleven centers, internationally, adapted to cha...
Not surprisingly to those of us with our feet firmly planted in writing center work, the theories we...
Every year, even as I strive to become more authoritative as a scholar and find my voice as an autho...