The WAC Journal

117 articles
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January 2001

  1. The Status of WAC in Secondary Public Schools: What Do We Know?
    Abstract

    It’s a cloudy Thursday morning in November, and the university writing center is humming. A peer tutor sits at a table near the center of the room, listening to a sophomore explain her essay assignment for a recreational therapy class while a second tutor helps a freshman fine tune his thesis statement for a research paper. In the far corner, a third tutor works at a computer, responding to an on-line submission from a student in a local high school’s creative writing class. The director is conferring with a member of the mathematics department on ways to include meaningful writing activities in an advanced calculus class. It’s a typical day at a college-level writing center, but it raises a question for educators. Are similar scenes occurring in our public secondary schools? As an awareness of the importance of writing as a means of learning has grown, the writing-across-the-curriculum (WAC) movement has gained momentum on college campuses. One response to this increased focus on the importance of writing in the learning process has been the establishment of writing centers at hundreds of colleges and universities. These centers are designed to serve the needs of both students and faculty and aim to support learning in all fields. While these programs have flourished in many post-secondary settings, formal WAC programs in general and writing centers in particular still seem to be something of an exception in secondary public schools; however, interest in these practices appears to be growing there as well. A number of publications show an increasing integration of WAC philosophy and strategies into secondary public school settings. Pamela Farrell’s The High School Writing Center: Establishing and Maintaining One not only provides practical information on designing and running writing labs in secondary schools, but also illustrates the variety of forms

    doi:10.37514/wac-j.2001.12.1.04

January 2000

  1. Growing Up With WAC
    doi:10.37514/wac-j.2000.11.1.02
  2. Confessions of a Newcomer: WAC in HI 112 at PSC
    doi:10.37514/wac-j.2000.11.1.03

January 1998

  1. Writing to Learn in the Music and Theatre Department
    doi:10.37514/wac-j.1998.9.1.11
  2. Writing to Learn Mathematics
    doi:10.37514/wac-j.1998.9.1.06

January 1997

  1. How WAC Changed My Life (1997)
    doi:10.37514/wac-j.1997.8.1.17
  2. How I Started Using WAC and Ended Up Taking Algebra Again: A Review of Useful Works on Writing Across the Curriculum (1989)
    doi:10.37514/wac-j.1997.8.1.12

January 1995

  1. Dead Psychologists' Book Reviews: WAC Magic in the History and Systems of Psychology Course
    doi:10.37514/wac-j.1995.6.1.01

January 1994

  1. The Collaborative Textbook as Teaching Tool
    Abstract

    Creating a Textbook Writing Across the Curriculum activities have been successful not only in improving the art of writing but in fostering a wide variety of other skills critical to collegiate learning, such as conceptual integration (Weiss & Walter, 1980) and interdisciplinary study (Hamilton, 1980). The creation of a collaborative textbook, documents in which student writing representing the bulk of course work is assembled, has been used extensively with young students (Weiss and Walter, 1980). Its use as the exclusive text in a college setting remains unreported in recent educational literature, although this does not mean it is untried. Each semester during the 1992-93 academic year, two sections of undergraduates at Plymouth State College studied introductory psychology without purchasing any text or reserve materials. Students in these sections instead used a Writing-Across-the-Curriculum approach, in which writing and research skills were developed through mutually supporting projects. The students wrote their own textbook after researching key topics, while other students edited their work for accuracy, concepts, and form. All students reviewed and critiqued professional journal research for their semester papers. The students even proposed and wrote the questions on their final examinations. By the end of their term, participants had found, read, and critiqued journal-level research with the familiarity of graduating seniors. They had written an average of two pages of critical essays each week. Three out

    doi:10.37514/wac-j.1994.5.1.08
  2. Exploring Voice in Business Writing
    Abstract

    Many upper division business courses focus on applying the concepts and techniques studied throughout the undergraduate curriculum. The case method, which is often used to teach upper division business courses, exposes students to complex situations, aids in developing their analytical skills, and provides students with an opportunity to offer integrative solutions. An assortment of writing assignments for these case courses can enhance learning. Writing business memos and reports from a variety of organiza-tional perspectives and to a number of organizational audiences enables students to explore the realities of crafting business docu-ments meant to communicate and convince. The use of various perspectives and audiences challenges students to recognize the impact of organizational position in creating and maintaining a voice when writing. Assignments that Permit an Exploration of Voice By design, many of Plymouth State College’s upper division business courses are integrative. As an example, to enroll in Administrative Policy students need to have completed courses in (1994) 74 Writing Across the Curriculum

    doi:10.37514/wac-j.1994.5.1.05

January 1993

  1. Where The Faculty are with WAC
    doi:10.37514/wac-j.1993.4.1.05

January 1992

  1. WAC: A Dean's Voice
    doi:10.37514/wac-j.1992.3.2.03

January 1990

  1. Faculty Voices on Writing Across the Curriculum
    doi:10.37514/wac-j.1990.2.1.02

January 1989

  1. How I Started Using WAC and Ended Up Taking Algebra Again: A Review of Useful Works on Writing Across the Curriculum
    doi:10.37514/wac-j.1989.1.1.12
  2. "What Does the Professor Want and Why": A View from the Reading/Writing Center on WAC Teachers' Assignments
    doi:10.37514/wac-j.1989.1.1.14
  3. Writing to Learn Economics
    doi:10.37514/wac-j.1989.1.1.08
  4. Musings on Writing Across the Curriculum
    doi:10.37514/wac-j.1989.1.1.13