Joint Staff Meeting–Another Big Success!


Events, Writing Across the Curriculum, Writing Centers, Writing Fellows / Friday, March 11th, 2011

The undergraduate Writing Fellows and the staff of the Writing Center came together last Friday to build community and share scholarship at our annual Joint Staff Meeting. The meeting was conference-style, featuring panels of Writing Fellows’ original research on various topics related to tutoring and teaching writing. It was an inspiring experience, and renewed our (already strong) love for our writing community that has been cultivated around these programs and sustained by our shared passion for writing and tutoring.

The particular dynamic of this meeting reminded us, yet again, how unique and – okay, we’ll say it – awesome the Writing Fellows program is. Here were undergraduate students, usually considered the lowest rung on the academic ladder, presenting advanced and relevant research to graduate students, academic faculty, the works! The Fellows program offers a challenge to the normative academic hierarchy, and it’s refreshing to find those spaces on campus that are open to engaging with undergraduates on an intellectual level. We felt that the Fellows presenting rose admirably to that opportunity; we were so impressed with their poise and professionalism!

The meeting was divided into six panels, with the opportunity for each participant to attend three. Each panel featured a Writing Fellow presenting their research, and a Writing Center staff respondent. The panels included:

Molly Rentscher – “LGBTQ Safe Space: Writing Fellows and Their Tutoring Environments,” with respondent Dave Stock

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Jenna Mertz – “Walking the Line: Navigating Student ‘Voice’ in the World of Undergraduate Peer Tutoring,” with respondent Kate Fedewa

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Hueylie Lin – “Non-Native English Speakers in the Writing Tutorial,” with respondent Doyin Ogunfeyimi

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Lizzy Mathie – “Commenting on Advanced Student Papers: Engaging Students with Their Texts,” with respondent Michelle Niemann

Emily Kohlhase – “Thirty Years Later: Exploring the Effects of Nancy Sommers’ ‘Revision Strategies of Student Writers and Experienced Adult Writers’,” with respondent Kim Moreland

The presentations were selected for their quality and their shared relevance to both Writing Fellow and Writing Center staff. More than that, however, these pieces were connected by a common focus on student writing. In their own way, each Fellow addressed the question of how we – as writing instructors, tutors, peers, or just general members of the academic institution – can acknowledge and affirm the individual identity and particular talents of the students with whom we work, and how can we actively tune our feedback to empower them. The presentations engendered some great discussions – not just responses to the research itself, but also productive conversations that involved brainstorming how to change specific practices to create a more welcoming environment and, ultimately, to maximize our impact on students’ writing abilities and confidence.

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Thanks to everyone who planned and participated in this amazing event!

–Writing Fellow UADs Kelly Kopish and Rachael McCormick

4 Replies to “Joint Staff Meeting–Another Big Success!”

  1. This is my favorite staff meeting of every year, and this year’s iteration was no disappointment! Writing Fellows, you are amazing! Thank you for sharing your intellectual energy and efforts with all of us at the Writing Center. Thanks to you, we’re now a little better at what we do :))

  2. I really enjoyed the opportunity I had to participate in this year’s staff meeting, and I second Melissa’s comment about the Writing Fellows. What an exceptional group of undergraduates!

    Thanks, Emily and Cydney, for the work you do to make the Writing Fellows program so successful.

  3. Thank you, Kelly and Rachael, for writing this wonderful post! This has historically been one of my favorite staff meetings as well. It is incredible to witness the intellectual and physical poise of undergraduates (and Writing Fellows) at UW-Madison. In the three sessions I attended, I watched graduate students taking notes on the Fellows’ presentations, asking engaged questions, and discussing ways of changing their teaching in accordance with the Fellows’ research. I was so proud of our presenting Fellows!

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