Writing Across the Curriculum at KCC Welcome to our overview of the program with a focus on the process whereby faculty become WAC certified. Presentation.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What is it? What is it? Quality Matters (QM) is a nationally recognized, faculty- centered, peer review process designed to certify the quality of online.
Advertisements

Curriculum Maps Public Release: February 10, 2014
Writing to Learn-Using Informal and Formal Writing Inside and Outside the Classroom Rifat A. Salam, Ph.D. Borough of Manhattan Community.
Rajlakshmi Ghosh Cadey Korson Being a TA in a Science Lab.
Writing an Honors Thesis in the Marriott School of Management.
Adjunct Training for Elementary and Middle Grades Masters Program Gardner-Webb University Graduate Program Dr. Jane King – Elementary Dr. Kelly Taylor.
The Problem with Reflection: Lessons Learned Alfredo Gaitan University of Bedfordshire Cathy Buyarski
Introduction to the Faculty Evaluation System
Multi-State Collaborative 1.  Ashley Finley ◦ Senior Director of Assessment and Research – AAC&U  Bonnie Orcutt ◦ Director of Learning.
Pedagogy I: Semester-based Opportunities for Course Redesign The Ohio State University October 25, 2010.
Preparing Elementary Teacher Candidates for the edTPA Prior to Student Teaching: Documenting Experiences in a Math Methods Course Dr. Erica Kwiatkowski-Egizio.
Learning From Our Stakeholders: Using Research to Redesign a Business Writing Course Barbara J. D’Angelo, Ph.D. Otis White Association for Business Communication.
Peer-Led Team Learning: A Model for Enhancing Student Learning Claire Berardini & Glenn Miller Third Annual Faculty Institute Pace University.
Linda Nickel EPSB Project Specialist 1.
Writing the Honors Thesis A Quick Guide to Long-term Success.
“Any Time, Any Where” Faculty and Curriculum Development: Using Asynchronous Learning Tools Beyond the Classroom Cathy Dwyer and Constance Knapp Information.
Summer Online Courses A Distance Learning Alternative for Traditional Campuses North East Regional Computing Program Annual Conference (NERCOMP) Boston.
Five Key WAC Best Practices for Instructors across the Disciplines Presented by Deborah Schlacks, WAC Coordinator WAC Brown Bag October 8, 2012.
The purpose of this workshop is to introduce faculty members to some of the foundation issues associated with designing assignments for writing intensive.
Techniques for Improving Student Learning Outcomes Lynn M. Forsythe Ida M. Jones Deborah J. Kemp Craig School of Business California State University,
Design and Development Awards Spring 2015 TLOS Networked Learning Design and Strategies (NLDS)
Introduction: UT, Knoxville  27,000 students  1,915 Total FTE Teaching staff  1,049 FTE Tenure stream  273 FTE Non-tenure stream  593 FTE Graduate.
PROPOSED BY DEBRA GIBES, PARMIS JOHNSON, AND JULIE STEFFEY, INTEGRATED READING AND WRITING SEMINAR.
Elizabeth Nesius Writing Center Coordinator Passaic County Community College The Hybrid Tutoring Experience: The Path to Better Writers.
Blackboard Next Generation (Version 9.1) Introduction to New Features Coming Summer 2011.
Orientation Session ESL Teacher Preparation Grants Center for Language and Culture Graduate School of Education George Mason University Pre-Service Cohort.
Assessment Leader Training General Education Student Learning Assessment GEO Training Series: 2 of 5 Spring 2012 February 13, 2012.
Writing at Doane College: a Workshop David Smit Department of English Kansas State University.
Engaging the Arts and Sciences at the University of Kentucky Working Together to Prepare Quality Educators.
The Tenure and Promotion Application Process. Each candidate is responsible for compiling the materials for his/her application with the assistance of.
Promotion and Tenure Lois J. Geist, M.D. Associate Dean for Faculty Affairs and Development.
End of Course Evaluation Taimi Olsen, Ph.D., Director, Tennessee Teaching and Learning Center Jennifer Ann Morrow, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Evaluation,
Dual Enrollment Options
Improving the Teaching of Academic Genres in High-Enrollment Courses across Disciplines: A Three-Year Reiterative Study Chris Thaiss University of California,
Strategies for Written Assignments for FYOS Students Center for Teaching & Learning Fall 2013 Pedagogy Workshops September 24, 2013 Elizabeth Davis Dept.
TEAM-Math Teacher Leader Meeting October 28, 2004.
Faculty Evaluation Committee Workshop. Overview Evaluation Timeline Portfolio as a Whole Portfolio Organization –Teaching –Service (Students, College,
WHAT IS THE WPE? Writing Assessment Office Office of Undergraduate Studies Campus Center 1st Floor, Room
An Orientation: General Psychology Online. The Course Menu Shown on the far left is the menu used to navigate our Psychology course.
Facilitating Learning in Professional Experience: Mentoring for Success Module 1 - An Introduction.
MISSOURI PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENTS An Overview. Content of the Assessments 2  Pre-Service Teacher Assessments  Entry Level  Exit Level  School Leader.
Writing for Proficiency with Georgie Ziff. English 3000 is a course to help you meet the University Writing Skills Requirement. You must submit a Final.
CM220: Unit 1 Seminar “You must be the change you wish to see in the world.” ~ Mohandas Gandhi.
PGCE School Experience 1 Briefing Gill Woods. Important Dates for SE1 VISIT DAY Wednesday 7th October WEEK BLOCK SCHOOL EXPERIENCE 1 (SE1) Monday.
Developing Common Course Syllabi November 20, 2010 Heather Sass, Education Consultant Preview.
Academic Programs and Graduate Studies Office of Semester Conversion October 22, 2015 LI 2250 Get InFORMed: Support for Completing New Course Request Forms.
CM220 College Composition II Friday, January 29, Unit 1: Introduction to Effective Academic and Professional Writing Unit 1 Lori Martindale, Instructor.
Orientation Student Leaders (OSLs) are a prestigious group of students who are recognized and called upon for their leadership and contributions to the.
Welcome to Human Behavior and the Social Environment Dawn Burgess, Ed. D.
CAA Options: Collection of Evidence CTE Connection December 8, 2006 Rod Duckworth, Director of Career and Technical Education OSPI.
Office of Academic Affairs July 18, 2012 Faculty Focus Newsletter O Purpose: To keep faculty informed about key academic policies and college wide issues,
Graduate Instruction Methods Fall 2008 Being a successful TA Cesar D. Guerrero Department of Computer Science and Engineering October.
Storyboard UNIV 101 – The online student Carla Oñate Instructional Designer.
College Credit Plus Welcome Students and Parents to: Information Session.
Dual Enrollment Options Presented by GCISD Counseling Department 2016 – 2017.
HS-210 Medical Office Management. Why Medical Assisting or MOM? Why did you choose to become a medical assistant/MOM? Or why are you taking this course?
University of Southern Mississippi
Preparation of the Self-Study and Documentation
Master Academic Planning
June 5, 2017 General Track Meeting.
Designing effective assignments
The UIS Faculty Personnel Process
AP® Implementation New AP Resources and Supports
Introduction to the NSU Write from the Start QEP
Faculty Promotions Information Meeting
Writing for Proficiency with Georgie Ziff
General Studies ePortfolio Pilot
Master Academic Planning
General Studies ePortfolio Pilot
University of Southern Mississippi
Presentation transcript:

Writing Across the Curriculum at KCC Welcome to our overview of the program with a focus on the process whereby faculty become WAC certified. Presentation created by Kate Garretson, WAC Coordinator, with help from Tsubasa Berg, Manager of Kingsborough Center for Advanced Technology Training (KCATT)

Administrative structure Writing Intensive Program Coordinator: Gloria Nicosia, Professor and Chair, Department of Communications and Performing Arts, Certification Program Coordinator: Kate Garretson, Professor, Department of English Writing Fellow Coordinator: Julie Torrent, Assistant Professor, Department of English The WAC Program at Kingsborough is part of the Coordinated Undergraduate Education (CUE) Initiative under the direction of Reza Fakhari, Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs and Associate Provost. 12/6/12/6: KCC operates using a quarter system with a 12 week Fall semester, a 6 week Winter term, a 12 week Spring semester and a 6 week Summer term. W sections are offered only in the Fall and Spring. Faculty begin certification training in the Winter.

WAC Program Overview There are three overlapping sub-programs: Writing-intensive section Program Students must pass one W section as a graduation requirement. Faculty Certification Program W sections are offered by WAC certified instructors. CUNY Writing Fellow Program at KCC Writing Fellows partner with faculty seeking certification and tutor students in W and Honors sections.

More about... Writing-intensive (W) Program Faculty Certification Program KCC Writing Fellow Program

Writing intensive sections (W) Students must pass one as a graduation requirement. Over 100 are offered each semester, in all the departments and majors. They are offered only by WAC certified faculty. A list is available every Fall and Spring online and on our WAC bulletin board. W sections are capped at 25 students. Characteristics 30% of the final grade is based on writing assignments. Revision of drafts, based on feedback, is required. Students write informally as well as formally about course content. Assignments build on one another.

More about... Writing-intensive (W) Program Faculty Certification Program KCC Writing Fellow Program

Faculty Certification Program There are three options for becoming WAC certified: A.an on campus workshop series B.an online tutorial C.independent submission of a writing intensive course portfolio. The goal of each is the submission of a course portfolio in which faculty showcase the writing assignments they use in the context of the goals of their course. After drafting this course portfolio in the Winter, Option A and B candidates pilot their course in the Spring. Final course portfolios are due at the end of June.

More about... Writing-intensive (W) Program Faculty Certification Program KCC Writing Fellow Program

CUNY Writing Fellows are funded through the Graduate Center and spend one academic year at KCC. Fellows work 450 hours a year, three days a week, on campus. Fall: Fellows become WAC certified by revising one of the courses they have taught at CUNY. Winter: Fellows work with faculty certification candidates on campus and online. Spring: Fellows partner with faculty piloting writing intensive versions of their course for the first time. Fellows also tutor W section and Honors students in our Assignment Lab in the Writing Center.

What’s involved in becoming “certified?” Writing-intensive (W) Program Faculty Certification Program KCC Writing Fellow Program

Why do faculty get certified? To be able to offer W sections for their department. To enjoy a course cap of 25 students for each W section offered. To receive 3 hours of release time upon successful completion of the certification process. To earn a letter of appreciation from the Provost for their Tenure and Promotion file and credit for a contribution to the college. To make the time to think about their teaching and how to better align their practices with their values and goals. To interact with faculty from other disciplines in talking about teaching and learning at KCC and make new friends.

A three step process: participate in a certification course, pilot your revised syllabus, submit a revised course portfolio to become certified.

How do faculty become certified? Option A: An on campus workshop series with nine sessions, Mondays and Thursdays from 1 PM to 3:30 PM. Option B: An online tutorial with nine modules to be completed in the Winter using Wordpress blogs. Option C: Independent submission of a writing intensive course portfolio according to KCC guidelines.

Option A. On Campus Group Work. In a 9 session workshop series, faculty read, write, and discuss with the goal of revising course goals, assignments, and syllabus structure; they submit a provisional course portfolio by mid February.

There is always time for reflection in the on campus workshop...

Faculty working on campus also post their homework on linked individual blogs online. That way, Coordinators, Writing Fellow partners, and other faculty can read and respond.

WAC Online: Working independently using our online tutorial

Some general facts about WAC Online. Goal: to retool a course to make it more reading/writing intensive. Faculty work on own schedule, but not at own pace: there is a timeline and a contract to ensure timely progress. Group discussion is enabled on a Motherblog site where certification candidates post regularly and respond to each other. Reflective writing designed to support course revision is completed on an individual blog. The course of study in 9 modules ends with the submission in mid February of a provisional course portfolio to which we respond. The final course portfolio is due in June after faculty have the opportunity to pilot the course with the help of a Writing Fellow.

Our online tutorial consists of two spaces: a Motherblog and individual faculty blogs, all interconnected.

The modules listed at the top of the Motherblog contain a list of reading and writing assignments connected to a specific topic.

Topics covered in the nine modules of WAC Online: Introduction (Fulwiler, Elbow, Emig, Russell, Bean, Ch 1) What are academic literacies? Which do you teach? (W&A, 1 -4) Support for Reading (Bean, Ch 9) Writing as Thinking (Bean, Ch 2: Critical Thinking) Creating Effective Formal Writing Assignments (Bean, Ch 6) Informal Writing (Bean, Ch. 7: Exploratory writing) Response (Bean, Ch 15/16: Coaching, Writing Comments) Assessing (Bean, Ch 14: Using Rubrics) Responding to Error (Bean, Ch 5: Grammar and Correctness) Faculty work primarily with John Bean’s Engaging Ideas, but also with the first four chapters of Effective Grading (Walvoord and Anderson). The goal is syllabus and assignment revision.

To post, faculty must choose the blog name in the upper left hand corner, then New, then Post

When WAC Online faculty post, they categorize each of their entries.

WAC Online faculty also categorize their postings when they work on their individual blog. Each assignment within a module has a category.

Prompts in each module consist of 5 tasks, or intellectual “moves.” Our goal is to model various kinds of informal, writing-to-learn assignments that faculty might consider using in their W course. 1.Writing reflectively about your own experience with the topic, including thinking about your own evolution as an academic writer. 2.Writing in response to a reading assignment; experimenting with approaches to annotation. 3.Application of ideas to a new context: What has been your experience with this topic in teaching your KCC course? What changes might you make and why? 4.Process writing about “what stood out” in the module work. Revising/editing that informal writing to share with a more public audience on the Motherblog. Reflecting on that process. 5.A fifth move involves posting to the Motherblog and responding to others there. Participating in a public exchange using writing.

Timeline for WAC Certification October 15: Application deadline Mid November: Orientation for certification candidates. January, February: Certification training, either online or on campus. January 19 th : Online and on campus candidates need to have completed the work for at least Modules 1 – 4. February 1 st : Online and on campus candidates must have completed at least Modules 1 – 7 of the WAC seminar. Mid February: Provisional course portfolios due by 5 PM. Spring Semester: Piloting of re-designed courses with the help of a Writing Fellow June: Courses portfolios are revised based on feedback received on the provisional course portfolio and faculty experience piloting it with the support of a Writing Fellow. June 30 th : Final course portfolios are due by 5 PM. Receive a letter from the Provost for your tenure and promotion file and 3 hours of release time/cash payment.

What is included in a Certification Course Portfolio? Reflective Statement Provide the reader of your portfolio with an overview of the course: What do you teach and why? What are the weight bearing elements of your syllabus? How has your thinking about the teaching of your course changed as a result of your experiences in the WAC certification program? What changes have you made and why? (Final portfolio: What did you learn from piloting this writing intensive version of your course? What changes have you made and why?) Detailed Syllabus Include teaching/learning goals of the course and the sequence and character of reading and writing assignments, including due dates for drafts. Writing will count at least 30% in determining the final grade for the course. Copies of Assignments (handouts you give to the student) Submit copies of all assignments, including informal writing prompts and Blackboard discussion topics. Assignments should match up with items on your syllabus. Student Work (Final portfolio only) Erase student names from samples. Student work (sample of good, better, best) should be attached to the assignments and clearly labeled.

Our tool is dialogue...