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George Washington University
Rewrites Its Writing Program
George Washington University (GWU), located
in downtown Washington DC, recently changed dramatically how it approaches
the teaching of writing to all its students. This revision of its writing
program is part of a national trend toward expanding requirements beyond
the traditional single, first-year writing course and extending writing
activities beyond composition courses. As this fall's issue of Peer
Review details, more and more colleges and universities now see
writing as an important teaching and learning tool as well as a skill
to be developed in all disciplines throughout a student's entire college
career.
As it considered changes to its own program,
GWU looked at successful models, such as Duke University's writing program
(see Peer Review, Fall 2003),
and focused on expanding its curricula to ensure that students receive
better training in writing--including writing in various disciplines.
The university is employing its writing center, developing new courses,
and revising existing course offerings to encourage innovative writing
instruction. The university also is developing a program in which students
present their work at an annual conference in DC.
In 2001-02, GWU's Academic Excellence Strategic
Planning Committee identified writing as a key skill for all students
and as a means to increase academic engagement. The committee noted research
that suggests that, "courses that include recursive writing increase time
on task and development of critical thinking skills." Researchers have
also found that students perceive courses that include an intense writing
component as more rigorous than courses that do not.
The goals of GWU's new program include teaching students:
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How to write for a variety of audiences
and communicate through several forms relevant to particular disciplines
(e.g. research reports, outlines, long research papers, course journals,
reflective essays, lab reports, and posters);
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How to use writing to develop research
and analytical skills;
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How to revise and edit drafts, individually
and in collaboration with peers and faculty; and
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How to structure and organize writing and
use documentation and styles of argumentation within specific disciplines.
The university is launching its revised writing
program in the 2003-04 academic year. The first phase of the program is
beginning with 700 first-year students selected at random in 2003-04.
In addition to a new first-year course, they will all also enroll in Writing
in the Discipline (WID) courses beginning in 2004-5. These courses will
engage students in recursive writing throughout their undergraduate careers.
Implementing the New Writing Program
The GWU Writing Task Force includes faculty
from every GWU school involved in undergraduate education, and it gathered
insight from faculty from many disciplines in developing the new University
Writing Program (UWP). Its goal was to increase academic engagement by
including more recursive writing in discipline-based courses in sophomore
and junior years. In addition, the revised foundational, freshman writing
course reinforces fundamental writing skills. UW20 is a four-credit course
for first-year students that, when implemented in conjunction with the
WID program, will replace two freshman-level composition courses. In UW20,
students develop writing and research skills in a thematically based course.
Different sections of the course are organized around a wide array of
themes. Students are required to develop ideas through research, critical
analysis, and synthesis of information. The course also requires students
to produce 30-35 pages of finished writing through at least three distinct
writing projects, each involving a process of drafting, revision, and
final editing.
The program also includes Writing in the Discipline
(WID) courses for sophomores and juniors. These courses are designed to
help students become effective writers in a discipline. The classes are
limited to an average of 15-20 students taught by full-time instructors
and focus on discipline-based writing throughout the semester. According
to a memo from Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs Donald R.
Lehman, “The courses are conceived to facilitate student involvement
with particular bodies of knowledge, methods of scholarship, and modes
of communicating,” Writing in these WID courses also involves revision
and editing with the help of peer and/or instructor feedback and with
an eye to making sure the writing is appropriate for audiences in a particular
discipline. Teacher-student ratios may be kept low through the assistance
of graduate students to support the faculty teaching WID courses.
Structure, Administration, and Faculty
Development
The new university writing program will be administered
by an Executive Director who oversees the program and collaborates with
directors of each of the two new course programs (UW20 and WID). The executive
director will coordinate with a writing center director and a multidisciplinary
advisory committee, to which each school appoints its own representative.
This committee guides the program and reviews syllabi for proposed WID
courses. The UWP executive director will develop workshops for faculty
and graduate student assistants on the craft of teaching writing. Finally,
the University is offering curriculum development grants on an application
basis to faculty proposing to develop and offer WID courses.
Students Present Their Work in a Public
Forum
This spring the University will launch a new
University Writing and Research Symposium, a two-day capstone event at
the end of the semester in which select students from first-year University
Writing (UW20) and, eventually, Writing in the Disciplines (WID) courses
will present writing and research that builds upon work they have begun
in their classes. Presentation format will vary depending upon discipline,
from poster sessions to performance pieces to papers presented in panels.
Students will present their work to an audience of community members,
parents, faculty, and fellow students, and engage in question/answer sessions
after their presentations.
The Symposium will provide college students
with a forum in which their research is presented and recognized as a
vital element of public discourse. Because the Symposium will encourage
audience members and panelists to debate the issues raised in student
papers, student-writers will have a unique opportunity to recognize the
impact of their projects.
In addition, in upcoming years, the Symposium
will serve as a bridge between the first-year writing course and the WID
courses. Student research will be presented from across a range of disciplines,
providing freshmen an opportunity to see how research and writing develops
in upper-division courses. Furthermore, the presentation modes will vary
according to disciplinary practice: in addition to students reading their
work in panels, students in the sciences might present poster sessions;
students in the arts might perform short works; students in business classes
might use Power Point presentations.
Finally, the Symposium will provide an opportunity
for faculty development. Writing faculty tend to work in a state of unproductive
isolation from one another. The Symposium ensures that at least once a
year, faculty members from across the university would come together to
discuss the theory and practice of student writing. In particular, the
proposal review process (during which instructors would read and discuss
the proposals put forward by participating WID and UW 20 courses) affords
faculty the opportunity to learn about the work done by students in other
instructors' courses. This process will allow for an open, regular discussion
of writing pedagogy, of what constitutes good writing, and of disciplinary
distinctions in the teaching of writing. In addition, the Symposium introduces
faculty members who are not yet involved in WID courses to the philosophy
of writing-intensive pedagogy. By seeing how other professors have developed
writing assignments, they can begin to imagine how writing can fit into
their own courses.
For more information about GWU's new writing
program, see www.gwu.edu/~uwp.
To view articles from AAC&U's forthcoming issue
of Peer Review on "Writing in the New Academy," (scheduled for
release in late December), see www.aacu.org/peerreview.
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