Resistance and Control: The Complex Process of Creating an OWL (1996)

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The Online Writing Lab should be considered a tool designed to assist students, especially non-traditional, commuting students. This was our Writing Lab's argument for creating an OWL for Texas Woman's University, which has a large number of these types of students as well as three campuses (Denton, Dallas, and Houston) and only one Writing Lab to support them.

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Writing Spaces: Technoprovocateurs and OWLs in the Late Age of Print (1996)

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The long list of "online writing labs," or OWLs, compiled by the University of Maine's Writing Center Online offers testament to the range of writing services establishing an identity in cyberspace. Clever and memorable as it is, the acronym OWL can hardly begin to describe the work accomplished in this variety of sites.

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PR(OWL)ING AROUND: An OWL by Any Other Name (1996)

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As in the natural world, cyberOWLs come in a variety of species, from completely online, full-service writing centers to those that serve to announce their existence. Rising early enough one day to hunt OWLs, I went searching through the dark, wooded forests of the cyber-jungle and identified the names of some 93 self-styled OWLs!

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From the (Writing) Center to the Edge: Moving Writers Along the Internet (1995)

The Internet, an electronic network linking computers throughout the world, invites teachers to explore its uses for writing instruction because it is a text-based environment. Users communicate by writing messages that travel out onto the Internet, read the prose in its vast pool of resources, and gather information from those resources for their own writing.

Continue ReadingFrom the (Writing) Center to the Edge: Moving Writers Along the Internet (1995)

From Place to Space: Perceptual and Administrative Issues in the Online Writing Center (1995)

Online conferencing, including both synchronous and asynchronous exchanges, started in the composition classroom and moved to the writing center. Writing centers, no longer limited to face-to-face encounters, have begun exploring the potential of electronic conferencing.

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E-mail Tutoring, a New Way to Do New Work (1995)

Although writing centers have used computers for over a decade now, they have used them primarily in autotutorials (computer-assisted instruction) and for word processing. These applications reflect the influence of the process movement in composition studies and the writing center's commitment to the individual writer.

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Tutoring in Cyberspace: Student Impact and College/University Collaboration (1995)

The Writing Center Consultation Project is a collaboration between the University of Arkansas at Little Rock (UALR) and the Oak Ridge campus of Roane State Community College (RSCC) in Tennessee. Undergraduate RSCC students e-mail drafts of their essays to graduate students at UALR who then return the drafts through e-mail along with comments.

Continue ReadingTutoring in Cyberspace: Student Impact and College/University Collaboration (1995)