MWCA Midwest Writing Centers R
Transcription
MWCA Midwest Writing Centers R
MWCA Midwest Writing Centers Volume 32 Number 2 March 2011 Letter from The Chair iding the bus to work at the University of Minnesota last week, I was delighted to see the combination of silliness and optimism embodied in this snowperson. It’s a bleak and lonely time of year in Minnesota, so this was a welcome communiqué from the residents of the apartment building near the entrance to I-94 East. I’m pleased, too, that this optimism (and a sustaining sense of humor) is in full effect 270 miles farther along I-94 East, in Madison, Wisconsin. Battling a special kind of bleakness and scarcity, friends, colleagues, and fellow citizens gather at the Capitol, in body or in spirit. Their collective work to ensure rights for everyone is truly inspiring, and makes me all the more excited for our upcoming conference there. Talking to Brad Hughes at the University of Wisconsin and reading Facebook updates from my friends and colleagues make me feel strongly connected to this vital part of our region. Connection and communication are important for writing center work. Beyond the one-to-one work of our consulting sessions, writing center professionals need to connect and communicate with people who can support and sustain them. From recent Twitter Revolutions overseas, as well as from the use of social media to organize and inform about what’s going on in Madison, we know that social media and web technology can do much to create powerful connections among far-flung people. (They can even make for creative and unexpected acts of generosity: people have used the web to order pizza for protestors —even from as far away as Egypt). I want to take advantage of this all-digital edition of the MWCA Newsletter to remind our membership of the many ways in which we can use digital tools to communicate with and nourish each other in our own work, locally, regionally, and nationally. MWCA is, of course, a regional organization within the larger International Writing Centers Association (IWCA), whose website contains a wealth of resources and opportunities for learning from each other. One of those resources (unaffiliated with IWCA) is the wcenter listserv, which provides a forum for all of us in the global writing center community to share—and productively question—our diverse ideas, goals, and values. Closer to home, however, may be listservs for each MWCA state or local region: Minnesota, for example, has a lively listserv specifically for members of our state consortium and another for the E–12 Writing Centers R Collective, a sub-group of MWCA members who run, work in, and/or are supporters of E(arly education)–12 writing centers in Minnesota. I encourage you to visit the newly redesigned MWCA website and, after admiring the design and implementation work of MWCA Vice Chair and Web Guru Greg Dyer, click on your state link at the top of the home page. There you will find your state’s Consortium Coordinator, who will gladly connect you with other writing centers in your region—many of which you will find listed there. (If your writing center is missing from the list, please contact Greg to get it added.) Collaboration is also possible for us on wikis and blogs. As a recent discussion on the wcenter listserv revealed, many writing centers have Facebook pages, blogs, and Twitter accounts. Thanks again to the work of Greg Dyer, MWCA has its own wiki, where members can find information on past conferences and plan for the upcoming one. For consultants interested in knowledge-sharing and reflection through blogging and podcasting, there is Clint Gardner’s PeerCentered, among many other sites where folks can connect and communicate. Not only our professional but our writing selves can benefit from online connections.There is a wealth of free collaborative writing and conversation spaces, from Google to Dropbox. The dissertators among us who seek community, accountability, strategy-sharing, and the occasional commiserator might try sites like Phinished; those of us who need some external pressure to produce (or just want a good laugh) should pay at least one visit to Dr. Wicked’s Write or Die. Speaking of a good laugh, I frequently rely on the power of humor in our writing center world to create community and stretch our thinking. Friends and colleagues near and far have recently shared with me the Film School Thesis Generator, the PoMo English Title Generator, Dissertation Haiku, the Writing Lab Hulk, and the hilarious (and surprisingly comforting) Journal of Universal Rejection. Of course, digital connections are great—but they cannot substitute for the warmth of a group of people gathered together to work and play. With that in mind, I am hopeful that we will all see each other in the face-to-face environment of the MWCA conference in Madison this coming fall. ♦ Katie Levin Photo by Chris Wiley Table of Contents Letter from the Chair.......... …..1 State Consortium……….……...2 Mini-Regional News .... ……….3 The New Face of the MWCA Website ................... …………...4 Good news! The deadline for proposal submission for the MWCA Conference in Madison has been extended to March 25. Submissions should be made via https//c4w.cla.umn.edu/mwca/ Midwest Writing Centers 2 State Consortium News The Iowa Writing Center Consortium met for the first time in September 2010 at Grand View University in Des Moines to form this fledging state-level organization. Sixteen Iowa colleges and universities were represented by directors, staff and tutors. Our next retreat will take place Friday, April 15, 2011, in Iowa City. Our location is Iowa City, sponsored by the University of Iowa Rhetoric Writing Center which is directed by Carol Severino. The program will include individual writing center updates, a business meeting, a session to discuss plans for the upcoming MWCA conference in Madison, and four one-hour breakout sessions. Assessments from the fall retreat indicated the need for more tutor involvement. Consequently, a tutor panel was established to develop two tutor-planned and -led breakout sessions for the April retreat. The tutors from several writing centers are collaborating on the sessions. After the April gathering, we will meet annually each spring. Anyone wishing further information should contact Keith Reins at Kirkwood Community College, kreNebraska Consortium News: In September, Tanya Cochran of Union College in Lincoln, NE, hosted our 4th Annual state consortium meeting. We enjoyed a full day of break-out sessions (essentially special interest group discussions) and Rasha Diab of UT-Texas, along with Tanya Cochran, presented a keynote address over lunch titled: "Toward a Peaceable Rhetoric and Pedagogy: An Academic Dialogue." It was another fabulous professional development experience for all involved. And the 5th Annual meeting is in the works--being planned by Tony Jasnowski of Bellevue University. Members of the Writing Center Professionals of Minnesota (WCPM) group met on January 14 at Macalester College, where Becky Graham and Jenny White hosted 31 people from 17 institutions for a stimulating discussion about working with multilingual writers. We drew on the expertise of our colleagues and shared tools and strategies that have worked well in our diverse centers and institutions. The University of Minnesota - Twin Cities's Kirsten Jamsen, Debra Hartley, and Katie Levin presented the results of their "Technology Across Borders" grant project as a resource or project idea for other institutions. With support from the University of Minnesota's CLA Student Technology Fee Committee, a group of administrators and consultants at the Center for Writing developed tools and resources to make the Student Writing Support program more welcoming and accessible for all writers, including the many multilingual writers at the University and beyond. Viewable at http://writing.umn.edu/sws/multilingual/, the tools and resources include two videos introducing Student Writing Support to students and faculty; "Voices of Minnesota's Multilingual Writers," a series of videos inspired by Wayne Robertson's "Writing Across Borders"; and an online self-study module designed to help students make informed choices about the trickiest part of English: the articles. Kansas Writing Center Consortium Friday, March 11 meeting at Kansas State University (Manhattan Kansas). Featured Speaker: Thomas Ferrell, University of Missouri at KC. Topic: sharing information about the collaborative tutor training program conducted by Kansas City area Writing Centers each Fall. Nearly fifty writing center staff and peer writing tutors received a warm welcome and a nice breakfast at the Chicagoland Winter Mini-Conference for Writing Center Tutors which took place at College of Lake County on Saturday, February 12, 2011. Six break-out sessions intoned the conference theme, Empowering Choices, which explored, instructed, and analyzed empowering scenarios that might transpire in a writing center. Session topics included rapport building, a tutor’s skill set, self-assessment for writing tutors, tutoring ESL writers and students with disabilities, and possibilities for developing heterophenomenological research in writing centers. Besides a tasty lunch, attendees enjoyed an anecdotal, entertaining, and resource rich keynote from Jud Curry, North Park University, who spoke on “Improvising, Writing, and DIY Learning” as a means to “Choose Your Own Adventure” in the changing higher ed marketplace. Final thoughts with hot chocolate and treats gave everyone a chance to network and to thank Jenny Staben and the CLC writing center staff for hosting. The final Empowering Choice… planning the next CWCA conference! Anyone interested in more information on the Chicagoland Writing Centers Association should contact Jenny Staben ([email protected]). Midwest Writing Centers 3 MiniMini-Regional News Mini-regional organizations have a lively cycle of their own. Information on what has been happening or is about to happen: The Greater Kansas City Writing Centers' Project will be holding its 6th Annual Tutor Retreat Thursday, Aug. 11 (9 a.m.-4 p.m.). Last year's retreat set record attendance numbers with 108 attendees from 11 different schools--two of which were local high schools starting new writing centers! For additional information about the 2011 GKCWCP Tutor Retreat or our mini-regional, please email Thomas Ferrel at [email protected]. The University Writing Center at UW-Eau Claire was recently awarded internal funds (over $150,000/yr) to transform the tutoring center into the Center for Writing Excellence, which will offer both students and faculty a diverse array of writing support services and programs. This money will allow the writing center to expand into a fullfledged WAC/WID center for faculty development and improved writing instruction in the disciplines. The award will also fund 16 Writing Fellows to work in upper-level disciplinary courses, as well as 10 ELL Fellows to work with English Language Learners in courses across the campus. Finally, the money will support a full-time, tenure-track Center Director to begin Fall 2012. Stay tuned! After years of reporting, requesting, planning, dreaming UW-Milwaukee Director Margaret Mika and tutors 'grandly opened' their new Writing Center is lovely, larger, more visible and accessible at the lst floor main entrance of Curtin Hall. Despite several nail-biting moments--the remodeling work and the opening day video production went down to the wire--the new Center's celebration and first day of tutoring went off without a hitch. The UWM staff and a record number of writers are enjoying their beautiful and sunny new digs. To read more and view photos: http://www4.uwm.edu/news/stories/details.cfm? customel_datapageid_11602=3872656&sms_ss=email http://www4.uwm.edu/writingcenter/The%20Center%20Piece%202010.pdf Director Crystal Mueller and her tutors from UW-Oshkosh have plenty of room in their new shared space as well as their own offices where they can close the door for privacy or ADA concerns. Also, there are windows! Lots of south-facing windows. What a change. A glass floor in the hallways lets natural light through to the first floor, just one of several green building features. Offices have walls of windows to let in natural light. The building has geothermal heating and cooling. More articles and photos about UW-Oshkosh's new Center are available at these links: SSC.JPG Two Offices.jpg philfirstsession.jpg glass ceiling.jpg phil waving.jpg whole suite.jpg Before and After photos from UW Milwaukee WC Midwest Writing Centers 4 B The New Face of the MWCA Website By the time you receive this newsletter, you may already have discovered a new look on the MWCA website (http://pages.usiouxfalls.edu/mwca). The site has retained its current design for many years, and a facelift was long overdue. While the most noticeable changes will be cosmetic, we hope you’ll also find the menus more user-friendly. A variety of links spread across various locations on the old homepage will be consolidated into a convenient menu on the left-hand side of the new page, and we’ll be inserting a list of “Quick Links” designed to provide easier access to related resources, such as the MWCA Wiki, the MWCA Profile (our database-driven site for membership and conference activity), and the IWCA website. In addition to providing the MWCA membership with a new look and increased convenience, we’ll also be moving some of the content—such as the archive of conference websites and calls-for -proposals—to the MWCA Wiki (http://mwca.pbworks.com), which offers untapped potential as a site for on-going collaboration. While the initial stage of the redesign will happen quickly, additional changes will taking place in the months ahead. Behind the scenes (hopefully), we’ll be transitioning toward the use of CSS throughout the website, and we’ll also be working to develop the MWCA Wiki and to increase the numbers of MWCA members following our Twitter feed (http://twitter.com/m_w_c_a). These resources may be particularly useful as folks prepare for the fall conference in Madison, Wisconsin. Please drop in on the site and give it a test run. And, as always, if you find glitches or have suggestions for additional revisions or increased functionality, please let us know. All suggestions and questions can be sent to Greg Dyer at [email protected]. Articles and news items for the next issue of the Midwest Writing Centers Association Newsletter should be sent to Carol Martin, North Park University, 3225 W Foster Ave., Chicago, IL 60625-4895 (e-mail address: [email protected]). Newsletter Editor: Jacquelyn L. Cuddeback Coe College Writing Center