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Channel: University Writing Center » Stand and Deliver: A Faculty Blog
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Instructor comments on drafts can elicit meaningful revision

When we comment on drafts of student writing or public speaking, we can easily get caught up in editing the minutiae instead of responding to the content. (Note here I refer to preparation of speeches,...

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National Day on Writing–October 20, 2012

In honor of the National Day on Writing,  several of us at the UWC wanted to share our thoughts about working with student writers. Check out what Liz Brogdon, Anthony Pannone, Amanda Hendrix-Black,...

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Teaching with models? Start with rhetorical analysis

It makes sense to show students a model (or example) before you ask them to write. You can find some ideas about selecting models at...

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Essay exam blues: Prompting the best performance

It’s that time of year when we assign essay exams. If the thought of grading them is giving you the blues, or if you’re fretting essay exams will prove that your students really can’t show what they...

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Portfolio approaches to writing instruction

A portfolio is as a collection of best or representative work. You may have heard about electronic portfolios being used for employment seekers. Many colleges or universities are now helping students...

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How’s the UWC doing? (And how you can prompt your students to use it)

It’s the start of a new semester, a time when we like to look back at our progress. And this year, our progress at the UWC has been stunning. Comparing our usage statistics from the same period in 2011...

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Responding to rough drafts: Avoid the trap of grading twice

One of the most crucial pedagogical techniques when it comes to communication, spoken or written, is providing feedback. But if a little feedback is good, does it stand to reason that a lot of feedback...

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Responding to rough drafts: Making the content better

In my last post, I wrote about the importance of limiting and prioritizing comments on rough drafts and the importance of responding to organization, audience concerns, and content before mechanics,...

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Responding to rough drafts: What counts in citation and documentation

In my last two posts on responding to drafts of student writing, I have emphasized the need to prioritize comments and to focus as much—if not more—on content and organization than on grammar and...

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Weaving straw into gold: Students tell us how the UWC could improve

When students consult with the UWC, we send them an exit survey. Usually, they don’t include anything on the open-ended comment section, but when they do, we pay attention. So far this semester, we’ve...

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Seven habits of highly effective communicators

Expert writers and speakers spend considerable time composing, thinking about what they want to say, and tailoring it to a specific audience. They spend time in preparation, doing research, going...

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The UWC online: Help in another guise

The UWC is online, and that’s something you might want to share with your students. You already know about our website (writingcenter.tamu.edu), but maybe you didn’t know we’re also on Facebook,...

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Why W and C courses require formative feedback

Cicero claimed the orator learns by precept and practice—precept first, then practice. In W and C courses, instruction is precept—what we tell students to guide them in producing that final artifact,...

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Help re-design the UWC website

Please help us redesign our website by taking this quick survey. It’s only three questions long, and it will help us improve! Take the survey by clicking here.  

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The power of “be”

If you tell students to avoid to be verbs in their writing, you are guilty. You may think be verbs decrease the power of writing, when, in fact, they can increase it. Writing instruction too frequently...

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