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Writing-Intensive Faculty Across 5 Colleges and 11 Disciplines Participate in First TAC/WAC Learning Community
by Sarah Baker, Assistant WAC Director, & G. Morgan, TAC Director
This Fall, Mason’s Writing Across the Curriculum
(WAC) program is collaborating
with the Technology Across the Curriculum
(TAC) program on a semester-long faculty
learning community to explore approaches
for incorporating technology when teaching
Writing-Intensive (WI) courses.
Faculty participants first attended a fullday
summer workshop that introduced
them to the goals of the learning community
and focused on discussing such issues
as their learning and writing goals for students,
challenges encountered in teaching
with writing and teaching with technology,
and successes with both writing and technology,
as well as an overview of various
technologies to use with writing. Starting
in September, these faculty met biweekly
to read about writing in disciplines and to
discuss new technologies that they themselves
are trying out (a wiki, a blog, Facebook,
Delicious, Twitter, Blackboard, and
others). The goal is to help them determine
which ones fit with the disciplinary writing
and learning goals they have for students
in their WI courses. However, the participants’
final projects are intended to benefit
not just the students in their courses but
also colleagues in their departments who
can also benefit from using technology to
facilitate writing in their courses.
In response to a reflective exercise that
asked faculty, among other things, to
describe one thing they have learned in the
group that they believe will help improve
how they teach student writing, Shannon
Davis (Sociology) explained how she has
“been reminded of the importance of being
transparent about the writing process with
my students.” Paul Cooper (Chemistry)
adds that he has “become really conscious
of trying to engage the students…. My
main attempt at this is through real life
examples so they can relate the material
they learn to the real world.” And Esperanza
Roman-Mendoza (Spanish) frames
what she has learned in the group more
broadly: “Thanks to our discussions and
readings… I was thrilled to see that we all
share the same concerns and challenges on
the subject of student writing, like … the
need to constantly adapt our expectations
regarding how students take advantage of
what we think is a more innovative, productive,
and rewarding way of learning.”
In January 2009, Sarah Baker and G.
Morgan will be presenting on this collaborative
learning community at the Educause
Mid-Atlantic Regional Conference.
TAC/WAC faculty learning community
participants:
- Lynn Constantine (Art)
- Paul Cooper (Chemistry)
- Shannon Davis (Sociology)
- Sue Durham (Nursing)
- Tamara Harvey (English)
- Giuseppina Kysar (Earth Science)
- Kimberly Leighton (Philosophy)
- Tamara Maddox (Computer Science)
- Chris Parsons (Environmental Science & Policy)
- Larry Rockwood (Biology)
- Esperanza Roman-Mendoza (Spanish)
- Lesley Smith (New Century College)
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