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In the last 15 to 20 years, writing centers have placed greater
importance on tutor training, focusing on teaching tutors best
practices in fostering student writers' engagement and writing
skills. Writing Center Talk over Time explores the importance of
writing center talk and demonstrates the efficacy of tutor
training. The book uses corpus-driven analysis and discourse
analysis to examine the changes in writing center talk over time to
provide a baseline understanding of the very heart of writing
center work: the talk that unfolds between tutors and student
writers. It is this talk that, at its best, motivates student
writers to continue to improve their writing and scaffolds their
learning and that makes tutors proud of the service that they
provide. The methods and analysis of this study are intended to
inform other researchers so that they may conduct further research
into the efficacy of writing center talk.
Writing centers in universities and colleges aim to help student
writers develop practices that will make them better writers in the
long term and that will improve their draft papers in the short
term. The tutors who work in writing centers accomplish such goals
through one-to-one talk about writing. This book analyzes the
aboutness of writing center talk-what tutors and student writers
talk about when they come together to talk about writing. By
combining corpus-driven analysis to provide a quantitative,
microlevel view of the subject matter and sociocultural discourse
analysis to provide a qualitative macrolevel view of tutor-student
writer interactions, it further establishes how these two research
methods operate together to produce a robust and rigorous analysis
of spoken discourse.
Business Communication supports the high standard of business
communication that is relevant to today's modernized workplace.
While staying true to its tradition, the 13th edition vastly
streamlines and updates the chapter content and organization,
making the text more elegant and usable. The text's foundation is
its rhetorical approach, underscoring in each chapter the
importance of analyzing each communication situation in terms of
audience, purpose, and context. This approach empowers students to
shape their messages effectively-no matter the channel. Besides
numerous chapter-ending exercises, McGraw Hill's Connect provides
exercises that further reinforce the concepts.
Writing centers in universities and colleges aim to help student
writers develop practices that will make them better writers in the
long term and that will improve their draft papers in the short
term. The tutors who work in writing centers accomplish such goals
through one-to-one talk about writing. This book analyzes the
aboutness of writing center talk-what tutors and student writers
talk about when they come together to talk about writing. By
combining corpus-driven analysis to provide a quantitative,
microlevel view of the subject matter and sociocultural discourse
analysis to provide a qualitative macrolevel view of tutor-student
writer interactions, it further establishes how these two research
methods operate together to produce a robust and rigorous analysis
of spoken discourse.
In the last 15 to 20 years, writing centers have placed greater
importance on tutor training, focusing on teaching tutors best
practices in fostering student writers' engagement and writing
skills. Writing Center Talk over Time explores the importance of
writing center talk and demonstrates the efficacy of tutor
training. The book uses corpus-driven analysis and discourse
analysis to examine the changes in writing center talk over time to
provide a baseline understanding of the very heart of writing
center work: the talk that unfolds between tutors and student
writers. It is this talk that, at its best, motivates student
writers to continue to improve their writing and scaffolds their
learning and that makes tutors proud of the service that they
provide. The methods and analysis of this study are intended to
inform other researchers so that they may conduct further research
into the efficacy of writing center talk.
Talk about Writing: The Tutoring Strategies of Experienced Writing
Center Tutors offers a book-length empirical study of the discourse
between experienced tutors and student writers in satisfactory
conferences. It analyzes writing center talk, focusing on tutors'
verbal strategies, at the macro- and microlevels. The study details
tutors' use of three categories of tutoring strategies-instruction,
cognitive scaffolding, and motivational scaffolding-with each
chapter of the analysis ending in practical advice about tutor
training. The second edition adds to the discussion of research
provided in the first edition, maintaining the two previous goals:
to provide a theory-based coding scheme for analyzing tutoring
strategies according to their potential for instructing and
scaffolding student writers' learning, and to demonstrate that
analysis on 10 satisfactory conferences conducted by experienced
writing center tutors. New to this edition, the authors expand the
previous discussion of the coding scheme with additional details
about its development. Along with the expanded Chapter 3 about
research methods, this edition features new examples from the
corpus of conferences and updates the literature review.
This collection helps students and researchers understand the
foundations of writing center studies in order to make sound
decisions about the types of methods and theoretical lenses that
will help them formulate and answer their research questions. In
the collection, accomplished writing center researchers discuss the
theories and methods that have enabled their work, providing
readers with a useful and accessible guide to developing research
projects that interest them and make a positive contribution. It
introduces an array of theories, including genre theory,
second-language acquisition theory, transfer theory, and disability
theory, and guides novice and experienced researchers through the
finer points of methods such as ethnography, corpus analysis, and
mixed-methods research. Ideal for courses on writing center studies
and pedagogy, it is essential reading for researchers and
administrators in writing centers and writing across the curriculum
or writing in the disciplines programs.
Talk about Writing: The Tutoring Strategies of Experienced Writing
Center Tutors offers a book-length empirical study of the discourse
between experienced tutors and student writers in satisfactory
conferences. It analyzes writing center talk, focusing on tutors'
verbal strategies, at the macro- and microlevels. The study details
tutors' use of three categories of tutoring strategies-instruction,
cognitive scaffolding, and motivational scaffolding-with each
chapter of the analysis ending in practical advice about tutor
training. The second edition adds to the discussion of research
provided in the first edition, maintaining the two previous goals:
to provide a theory-based coding scheme for analyzing tutoring
strategies according to their potential for instructing and
scaffolding student writers' learning, and to demonstrate that
analysis on 10 satisfactory conferences conducted by experienced
writing center tutors. New to this edition, the authors expand the
previous discussion of the coding scheme with additional details
about its development. Along with the expanded Chapter 3 about
research methods, this edition features new examples from the
corpus of conferences and updates the literature review.
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