After chatting with Greg Peterson about his experience working as a Writing Fellow in a Communications Disorders class (mentioned in last week's blog), I decided that I wasn't satisfied with just a short conversation and begged him if he would let me interview him.
Thankfully, he agreed.
I should mention that Greg is a second year graduate student in the English program at EIU, he has worked in the Writing Center for three semesters, he taught English Composition course on campus last fall, and he is currently writing his Master's thesis about the hero's journey in David Foster Wallace novels.
He's also cool.
What follows is Greg's great answers to my simple questions about his experience working as a Writing Fellow.
What follows is Greg's great answers to my simple questions about his experience working as a Writing Fellow.
1. Did
you know anything about the discipline your assigned course is in before
the course
started?
No. In fact, the course material is
fairly advanced communication disorders and sciences knowledge. The coursework
focuses mainly on brain science: how the brain works and how the brain can fail
to function properly, resulting in communication disorders.
2. How
many classes do you sit in on during the week?
1 class, 50 minutes, three times a
week.
3. Do
you help design the writing assignments for this CDS course?
The professor consults with me when
creating writing assignments and assignment sheets. Ultimately, the assignments are of her design, but she does ask me to make sure that these assignments are clear. She also asks me to make sure that the assignments are writing intensive and challenging.
4. How
is being a Writing Fellow different than being a consultant in the Writing
Center?
Many ways. The most basic being
that I get the privilege to work with a specific group of students who are all
doing the same assignment. I get to observe the different ways the class full
of students approach a writing assignment. I also get to work with the same
writers on four different assignments, so I can get a closer look at their
processes and individual progress. The Writing Center is in some ways the
opposite experience. You get the privilege of constantly working with an
amazing chaos of diverse writers and writing assignments at different skill
levels and stages of the process.
5. Are
you given opportunities to teach writing lessons in the classroom or are you
strictly meeting with students during assigned times?
Every once in a while I am granted
class time to give mini instructional lessons on facets of the composition
process like paraphrasing, thesis crafting, and creating successful
introductions and conclusions.
6. How
has being a Writing Fellow changed your tutoring style?
I’m sure it has affected me in ways
I don’t even realize, but mostly it has made me more aware of individual
students’ writing process.
7. What
other disciplines do you think could benefit from having a Writing Fellow?
Any
course that involves writing assignments could benefit from a Writing Fellow, especially disciplines that
participate in WAC.
More funding perhaps? But what department doesn't need more funding?
Special thanks to Greg Peterson for taking a moment to answer my questions.
Well put: "[as a Writing Fellow] I get the privilege to work with a specific group of students who are all doing the same assignment. I get to observe the different ways the class full of students approach a writing assignment. I also get to work with the same writers on four different assignments, so I can get a closer look at their processes and individual progress. The Writing Center is in some ways the opposite experience. You get the privilege of constantly working with an amazing chaos of diverse writers and writing assignments at different skill levels and stages of the process."
ReplyDeleteI especially appreciated "amazing chaos of diverse writers."
ReplyDeleteMight be one of my most favorite lines.