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Barnard's Writing Center Remains Progressive Model for Inter-Collegiate Discussion

Barnard's highly regarded writing program is hosting discussions on the cutting edge of writing instruction and theory this fall, including a gathering Friday and Saturday October 17-18 that has drawn student writing tutors from Dartmouth, Tufts, Mount Holyoke, Swarthmore, and Wellesley, among other selective colleges.

Barnard's Writing Fellows are leading workshops for 90 student colleagues from other colleges on the best approaches to writing and instruction during the two-day Peer Tutor Conference.

Writing Fellows are the specially selected and trained Barnard undergraduates who work with their fellow students to strengthen writing in all disciplines. The fellows work with students enrolled in Barnard course at all levels and various disciplines across the curriculum and also staff the Erica Mann Jong Writing Center, named for novelist Erica Jong, a Barnard graduate. The Writing Center is a resource available to any Barnard student.

The philosophy of the program is:

  • Writing is a process that happens in stages, in different drafts.
  • Writing a paper may stop, for instance, when the paper is due, but a piece of writing is never really be finished.
  • Writing is about revising and re-thinking ideas.
  • All writers, no matter how accomplished, can benefit from discussing their work with an intelligent reader and then revising it.

While offering basic grammatical and style assistance, the writing fellows are by no means mere copy editors. They enter into a dialogue with their peers about their writing, helping the writer to state his or her main argument clearly, offering suggestions on organization, evidence, complexity and clarity of thought.

"A good writing program should not have one specific model of what good writing looks like," says Lecturer Pam Cobrin, director of the Barnard Writing Center.

It was this notion that inspired an October 3 meeting of 22 Writing Center Directors from colleges in the metropolitan New York area, who convened at Barnard to discuss how to maximize effective writing by students.

Led by Cobrin, the group represented New York and Yeshiva universities, the State University of New York at Stony Brook, and the University of Connecticut main campus at Storrs, among others.

.The Writing Center is part of a larger Writing Program that was launched in 1990 by Senior Lecturer Nancy Kline Piore. "Our program is aimed at helping the Barnard community-and Columbia students enrolled in Barnard courses-to strengthen their writing by taking full advantage of the writing process," said Piore. "The writing fellows are a force for good writing throughout the College."

The center is intended to help struggling writers and to serve as a soundboard and resource for more accomplished writers, said Cobrin, who serves as a faculty consultant at the Writing Center, which opened in 1992.

Barnard's Writing Fellows, who are drawn from majors across the curriculum, are the backbone of the successful Barnard Writing Program. To maintain that success, Cobrin believes inter-collegiate dialogues like the one on October 3 and the meeting of undergraduate peer tutors this weekend are essential to Barnard's reputation as a college devoted to excellence in writing.

Barnard will expand this commitment to writing in the winter of 2004 by hosting a one-day Young Writers Institute for public high school students in New York. This pilot program will involve Barnard's Writing Fellows and will expand the idea of the high school essay contest Barnard has run for the past 15 years in the public high schools.

No matter the age of the writer, Cobrin and Piore believe the cornerstone of the Barnard Writing Program is the give-and-take between Writing Fellows and their peers as they work toward better writing. "Every writer needs a reader," Piore says.

Contact: Glenn Slavin in the Barnard Office of Public Affairs, 212-854-7522, or gslavin@barnard.edu

 

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