Praxis: A Writing Center Journal

14 articles
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2025

  1. Review of Critical Thinking in Academic Writing: A Cultural Perspective
  2. Review of The Creative Argument: Rhetoric in the Real World

2022

  1. Review of Queerly Centered: LGBTQA Writing Center Directors Navigate the Workplace

2020

  1. Review of Multimodal Composing: Strategies for Twenty-First-Century Writing Consultations , edited by Lindsay A. Sabatino and Brian Fallon

2019

  1. Review of Re/Writing The Center: Approaches To Supporting Graduate Students In The Writing Center , Edited By Susan Lawrence And Terry Myers Zawacki
  2. Review of Writing Program and Writing Center Collaborations , Edited by Alice Johnson Myat and Lynee Lewis Gaillet
  3. Review of Performing Antiracist Pedagogy in Rhetoric, Writing, and Communication by Frankie Condon and Vershawn Ashanti Young

2018

  1. Review of The Writing Center as Cultural and Interdisciplinary Contact Zone by Randall W. Monty
  2. Review of “They’re All Writers”: Teaching Peer Tutoring in the Elementary Writing Center by Jennifer Sanders and Rebecca L. Damron

2017

  1. Reconsidering Reading Models in Writing Center Consultations: When Is the Read-Ahead Method Appropriate?
    Abstract

    Abstract After a decade of working in writing centers as a tutor and administrator, I have experienced and witnessed many challenging consultations. A particularly vexing type of consultation occurs when tutors work with advanced students writing in unfamiliar disciplines and genres. In this article, I consider whether the reading method employed during such consultations supports or detracts from tutors’ efforts to offer helpful advice. Specifically, I ask: When and how should writing tutors read students’ drafts to best support and engage them? How do the specific needs of student writers factor into selecting the best reading method? To respond to these questions, I first describe the results of a review of 70 well-known universities’ writing center websites, which reveals that the majority of centers require tutors to read students’ writing for the first time during consultations. Next, I posit some limitations of during-consultation reading models and argue that the read-ahead model may better meet the needs of some student-writer populations. To provide a framework for the read-ahead model, I illustrate strategies that may be implemented to prepare tutors for consultations, drawing on research-based techniques that a more-senior director and I used at a private doctoral-granting university as we established the first writing center on the campus. I conclude by suggesting that directors consider the read-ahead method as yet another tool in their vast arsenal of pedagogical techniques, particularly when tutors must work with advanced writers from unfamiliar disciplines.

  2. Review of Writing Groups for Doctoral Education and Beyond

2015

  1. Review: Multilingual Writers and Writing Centers

2013

  1. Review: A Synthesis of Qualitative Studies of Writing Center Tutoring
  2. Review: Peripheral Visions for Writing Centers