Graduate Writing Groups: Evidence-Based Practices for Advanced Graduate Writing Support
Abstract
Writing centers seek to expand their services beyond tutoring and develop evidence-based practices. Continuing and expanding the existing practices, the authors have adopted graduate writing groups (GWGs) to support graduate writers, especially those working on independent writing projects like a dissertation or article for publication. This article provides an effective model on how to develop and assess virtual graduate writing groups (VGWGs). This replicable, aggregable, and data-supported (RAD) research applied a mixed-methods design with pre- and postsurveys over the three semesters of running the VGWG. It found that the VGWG offered a full range of writing support that met graduate writers’ needs for time-based, skill-based, draft-based, and emotion-based support. Specifically, the VGWG significantly improved students’ approaches to writing in five key areas—goal setting, focusing on dissertation writing, generating plans for writing sessions, writing productivity, and writing progress. Therefore, this study contributes robust empirical validation of this model, suggesting that VGWG is an effective method to sup-port graduate writers and expand writing center services. Also, the authors provide a useful model on how writing centers can effectively assess through pre- and postsurveys in a straightforward manner, an assessment model that has both internal and external benefits.
- Journal
- Writing Center Journal
- Published
- 2022
- DOI
- 10.7771/2832-9414.1017
- CompPile
- Search in CompPile ↗
- Open Access
- OA PDF Gold
- Topics
- Export
- BibTeX RIS
Citation Context
Cited by in this index (0)
No articles in this index cite this work.
References (0)
No references on file for this article.
Related Articles
-
Assessing Writing Jan 2026Assessing the effects of explicit coherence instruction on EFL students’ integrated writing performance ↗Xi Li; Mo Chen
-
IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication Sep 2025Professionalizing Researchers: Mapping and Visualizing Doctoral Engineering Student Identity Development Through User-Experience (UX) Methods ↗Jason Tham; Diego A. Polanco-Lahoz; Madison Hanson; Jennifer Cross; Mario Beruvides
-
Praxis: A Writing Center Journal 2025Coming to Terms: A Quantitative Analysis of Naming Conventions in and of United States Writing Centers ↗Abraham Romney
-
The Peer Review Sep 2024Editing in the Writing Center: Exploring a Graduate Editing Service and the Role of Instructional Editing in Graduate ↗Dana Driscoll; Islam Farag
-
IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication Dec 2022So, You Have to Write a Literature Review: A Guided Workbook for Engineers: Catherine G. P. Berdanier and Joshua B. Lenart: [Book Review] ↗Nancy Barr