Categories: All - assessment - critical - tutorials - infrastructure

by Templeton Templeton 7 years ago

170

Mindomo DC WRITING INITIATIVE

The DC Writing Initiative emphasizes the integration of critical thinking in writing assignments, ensuring that students engage with at least one critical thinking topic each week. To support this, the initiative provides low-stakes writing opportunities in initial courses across various disciplines and offers numerous tools and resources like online reference guides and web-based tutorials.

Mindomo DC WRITING INITIATIVE

DC WRITING INITIATIVE

CRITICAL THINKING (CT)

1 CT requirement in every writing assignment
1 CT discussion topic per week

WRITING TO DEMONSTRATE KNOWLEDGE

Program Capstone
Essay exams
Course final paper
Articulation of ideas, concepts, connections, summaries

FEEDBACK

Student Responses
Reflection
Journalling
Faculty Responses
End of term class-wide writing evaluation
Rubrics: DQ, Annotated bib, Writing, Final Paper, Capstone

ASSESSMENT

Plan and make improvements
Record progress, no change, new weaknesses
Compile and analyze evaluations How often?
Contract faculty to evaluate samples
Build an assessment rubric
Classroom rubrics are the source of evaluation data
Pull writing samples every term

WRITING TO LEARN

Subtopic
Research papers
Annotated Bibliography
Discussions
Exploration of ideas, concepts, connections, summaries

INFRASTRUCTURE

Tools and Resources
Web-based tutorials and exercises (use Flipboard approach?)
ONline reference guides (Hacker, Easybib, etc.)
Tutor.com
EN105 as a set of tutorials

P/F, no credit, no cost; take them till you pass them;

Who determines the P/F? Registrar involvement, degree-planning required!

Low-stakes writing: all "first" courses
BSSSDA: ENGL270, HIST310; BSMS: COMM301, MNGT209, MNGT530; BSCJ: ENGL250,SCIE202, HIST210; BSCS CYBR210, CYBR230; BIS: COMM301, COMM315
EN101
Course Development/Revision
Writing effective discussion posts
Guidelines for Annotated Bibliographies
Guidelines for creating writing assignments
Course Expectations
Course Writing Objectives
Course Learning Objectives
Writing Assessment Exam
Score determines

what the student's "first writing course" will be

what writing transfer credits are accepted

Required post-admission, pre-registration activity regardless of courses presented for transfer credit

WHY?

Meet CGCS Academic Requirements (Gen Eds)

See Expository Writing or Professional Writing courses under General Education at http://catalog.norwich.edu/onlineprogramscatalog/bachelorsdegrees/generaleducation/

Writing = Communication = Connection to Others

Peter Elbow: Being able to render knowledge and experience in everyday language is a mark of real understanding

Peter Elbow’s “Reflections on Academic Discourse: How It Relates to Freshmen and Colleagues” (College English 53.2 (1991): 135-155)

Students can learn how to voice and stand by their opinions confidently
Students can learn to produce reasons & evidence that hold up on their own rather than leaning on the authority of convenient, commonplace, available sources

Peter Elbow: Academic discourse using the language of the textbook or the discipline insulates students from experiencing or internalizing the concepts they are learning

Peter Elbow’s “Reflections on Academic Discourse: How It Relates to Freshmen and Colleagues” (College English 53.2 (1991): 135-155)

Writing success will encourage students to write by choice in their lives