Writing assessment programs help place entering and mid-career
students in composition courses at the appropriate level, monitor
the progress of those students, and assist in placing them in
writing courses throughout their undergraduate careers. These same
universities also have writing instruction programs, which might
include writing centers, writing-across-the-curriculum initiatives,
and freshman and advanced composition programs. At many
institutions, though, writing assessment is not necessarily
considered fundamental to writing instruction, and there is little
communication between the assessment program and the composition
program. This book demonstrates that writing assessment and
instruction programs may be successfully integrated.
The contributors analyze the development of the writing
assessment and instruction program at Washington State University,
which is nationally recognized for its success. In doing so, they
provide guidance to other institutions planning to develop similar
integrated programs. The volume argues that writing assessment and
instruction should inform and influence each other; that they
should evolve together; and that they should be developed locally.
By tracing the success of the WSU program, the authors directly
challenge the use of national packaged assessment programs, such as
standardized placement tests.
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