ears to hear with: the instructed writing center

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Lawrie Hunter Kochi University of Technology http://lawriehunter.com Ears to hear with: The Instructed writing center 6th Symposium on Writing Centers in Asia Obirin College, TOKYO

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Presented at Writing Centers Association of Japan annual conference, Oberlin Univ., Machida, Tokyo. Emphasizing the difference between humanities/social science writing centers and sci-tech writing centers. A world of difference.

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Page 1: Ears to hear with: The instructed writing center

Lawrie HunterKochi University of Technology

http://lawriehunter.com

Ears to hear with:The Instructed writing center6th Symposium on Writing Centers in Asia

 Obirin College, TOKYO

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No need to take notes (:^0)

All materials can be downloadedfrom Hunter’s websiteshttp://lawriehunter.com/http://www.core.kochi-tech.ac.jp/hunter/

and many more ppts available athttp://slideshare.net/rolenzo/

Page 3: Ears to hear with: The instructed writing center

Ears to hear with: The instructed writing center

SUMMARY

Within the negotiations of a writing center consultation, the mentor can choose from a wide range of frames for support, and from a number of degrees of abstractness as well. Many of the strategies that the mentor might select, and many of the knowledge/skill perspectives as well, require that the client have specific items of knowledge and skill in place. This paper provides tentative, in-place answers to the problem of the client unprepared to received much of the help that the mentor might offer, in the form a curriculum that might be a requirement for certain writing center services.

ABSTRACT Within the negotiations of a writing center consultation, the mentor can choose from a wide range of frames for support, including rhetorical approaches, cohesion and readability considerations, and techniques for using model language from existing papers, to mention but a few. Many of the strategies that the mentor might select, and many of the knowledge/skill perspectives as well, require that the client have specific items of knowledge and skill in place.  This paper presents an existing long-in-use curriculum intended as intensive preparation/requirement for extensive writing center consultation for scholarship PhD students in engineering and management/policy at a Japanese university.  The content of the curriculum is based on client needs, in particular accessible writing, sound argument and production strategy. For each these three needs, a series of interventions are provided. For accessible writing, knowledge and skills for production of readable text and explicit cohesion are acquired through instruction, exercises and mentor scenario simulations. Similar grounding is provided for the crafting of clarity and logicality as elements of sound argument. The primary elements of production strategy (mimicry, conformity and assistance) practiced in detailed pragmatic simulations. By the end of the one-semester course, the would-be writing center client is capable of confidently working with text, in the form of text analysis work (separating levels of abstraction) and communication moves analysis work, as well as more fine grained work with cohesion, readability, clarity and precision. As a result, a considerable portion of the wide range of advice that the writing center mentor might offer will not fall on deaf ears. 

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Case study: Cmaps in academic writing

Asian EAP PhD students of academic writing for management.

KUT

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Dimensions of Media Object

Compehensibility

Lawrie HunterKochi University of Technology

http://www.core.kochi-tech.ac.jp/hunter/

KUT

Island of Shikoku

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Foreign PhD students 2003-2013

China 93Thailand 14Bangladesh 5

Vietnam 9Cambodia 3Mongolia 2Spain 2Czech 1India 1Indonesia 2Jordan 1Myanmar 1Nepal 1Niger 1Pakistan 1Sri Lanka 2Uzbekistan 1TOTAL 140

KUT EAP scenario

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Since 2003: - Japanese government scholarships

- for foreign students - in technical doctoral programmes.

! Graduation requirements:

- 2+ refereed papers in top journals- dissertation in English

L2 studyduring the PhD programis NOT a realistic strategy.

KUT EAP scenario

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What do writing centers DO?

-consultations

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consultations

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What do W.Ctr.clients WANT?

-mentoring-editing-rewriting-ghostwriting

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What do W.Ctr.clients GET?

-1~2 hits @ 45 min -strategic advice

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TypicalWCtr

clientneed

WCtrconsult

clientneed

WCtrconsult

clientfree

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Whom do W.Ctrs.serve?

-typically, humanities

-typically, narrators

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Can W.Ctrs.serve sci-tech?

-S-Ts want to be heard -S-Ts want strategies -S-Ts might want English

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Writing centerconstraints

-money-time-client numbers

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Today:What do W.Ctr. tutors want to say?

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Today:What can W.Ctr. clients hear?

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Typical W.Ctr.conundrums:

-no time -unprepared clients

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Extreme case:KUT writing center

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Extreme case:KUT writing center -enough time -enough money

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in a perfect world..

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in a perfect world..T: optimal learningC: optimal success

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Clientprofile

TL reading-slow-persistent-compliant

L1 persuasion:-by repetition-by continuation-unsignalled

TL writing-jumbled-unsignalled-malsignalled

KUT

L1: first languageTL: target language

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Clientstrategies

Argument construction-using L1 skills-using L1 knowledge

Writing:use model TL-for structure-for style-for cohesion-for logic-for proof

KUT

L1: first languageTL: target language

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Extreme case:KUT writing center -maximize

client learning -maximize

client success

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TypicalWCtr

clientneed

WCtrconsult

clientneed

WCtrconsult

clientfree

KUTWCtr

1-2semestersinstruction

researchsupervisor:

confirmcontent

TAW mentor:2-page bits,

multipleiterations

clientneed

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What do KUT W.Ctr.clients NEED?

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Audience AbstractnessRhetoric Document structure Register Summarization FAE Abstracts Rhetoric vs information Introductions

Conventions ReadabilityUsage Information structures Lexical units Voice Collocation Aspect Corpus Reference/antecedent Concordance Parallelism Style guides Nominalization

Subordinate clauses Accessibility Eliminating vagueness Information organization Eliminating ambiguity General-specific S-V separation SPSE S-V agreement Paragraph development Cohesion EthicalityReadability Avoiding plagiarism

Citation Purpose of writing Model language use Claim Paraphrasing Hedging Style Dossier Data commentary Conclusion writing SurvivalArgument Working with an editor RPaper structure Working with a mentor Communication moves 2-page system Moves in the intro section Discussion section moves

TAWneededknowledge(identifyproblems)

and

skills(evaluateand repair)

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Clientneeds

accessiblewriting

soundargument

productionstrategy

readabletext

explicitcohesion

clarity logicalitymimicry,

conformityassistance

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KUT writing centerinterventions

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Clientneeds

accessiblewriting

soundargument

productionstrategy

readabletext

explicitcohesion

clarity logicalitymimicry,

conformityassistance

Intervention:instruction,exercises,low-text tools

Intervention:instruction,exercises,mapping

Intervention:instruction,exercises,simulations

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Clientneeds

accessiblewriting

soundargument

productionstrategy

readabletext

explicitcohesion

Exercises: -topic/stress-S-V separation-old/new-pronoun reference-logical connectors

Exercises: -topic based cohesion-pronoun reference-logical connectorsTools:-cohesion charts

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Clientneeds

accessiblewriting

soundargument

productionstrategy

clarity logicality

Exercises: -parallelism-nominalization-subordinate clauses-eliminating vagueness-eliminating ambiguity

Exercises: -claim and hedging-summarizing-data commentaryTools:Argument maps

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Clientneeds

accessiblewriting

soundargument

productionstrategy

mimicry assistanceconformity

Exercises: -paraphrasing-concordance-citation-lexical unitsActivity:-dossier creation

Exercises: -register (FAE)-usageTools:-style guides-word lists

Activity:-self assessment-editor/mentor-coded feedback-communication

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Case study

L1: first languageTL: target languageHW: homework tasks

HW feedback:-edit surface-critique structure-critique cohesion-critique argument

Instructorinterventions

Analytical work:-analyze model TL-summarize model TL

Construction work-cluster of concepts-find structure-create expression

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grammar/surface features

usage/convention

document format

argumentsupporting claim

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Possible EAP teaching approach

research design/resultsresearchers

start writinghere

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grammar/surface features

usage/convention

document format

argumentsupporting claim

37

EAP teaching approach

research design/results

Mostwriting

instructionstarts here

KUTwriting

instructionstarts hereresearchers

start writinghere

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Thank you for your attention.Please write to me.

I'm happy to share/teach/collaborate.

Download this .ppt and many othersfromhttp://www.lawriehunter.com/presns/or view/download athttp://slideshare.net/rolenzo/

Lawrie HunterKochi University of Technology

lawriehunter.com