Yes! Our consultants have gone through additional training on successful strategies for leading synchronous sessions over Zoom and completing reviews asynchronously, and work hard to ensure that even through the technological barriers, their feedback is of the same quality as what they would provide you in person.
We also strive to ensure that equity and accessibility remain two of our highest priorities as we work with writers in any format. While we hope that students will choose synchronous appointments to our consultants can talk through assignments "live," asynchronous reviews will still provide students with similar questions, suggestions, and edits for revision.
The main location of the Center is located in the O’Malley Center, Room 207, which is across the atrium from the English Department and before you enter the Administration Building. The Director’s office is located in OC 206, right next to the Writing Center.
The Center is staffed by undergraduates from several majors who have completed EN 290, the Tutoring Writing across Contexts class taught by Maria Soriano Young, the Writing Center Director. Graduate Assistants and graduate students who are completing coursework in the English department also work there.
Writing consultants can assist with nearly any aspect of writing, and can help you at any point in the writing process. They can help you brainstorm, organize ideas, craft a thesis statement, restructure an essay, clarify and expand key points, formulate citations, and refine word, grammar, and punctuation choices.
Writers from all disciplines and programs and of all skill levels visit the Writing Center, and they all benefit from working with other writers. Any type of writing—creative, persuasive, informative, or research-based—can be brought into the Center.
We also welcome writing that is not for a course; students who would like to have their resumes proofread, or begin brainstorming or refining personal statements, for example, can bring those documents in.
Faculty and staff members are also invited to consider visiting the Writing Center with manuscript drafts or material for courses that they are taking. If consultants are unable to help with manuscripts, the Director is experienced with academic materials and copyediting and may be able to step in.
Yes; during our online learning period, we request that you schedule appointments in advance, since our consultants are all working offsite. You can make an appointment in two ways:
- Complete our Google Form
- Email the Writing Center directly (although we will ask you to fill out a Form so we can gather your information)
We schedule 30 or (rarely) 60-minute appointments, and you may request a particular consultant.
Students who are requesting synchronous appointments have the opportunity to select either 30 or 60 minutes on their appointment request Form. Asynchronous appointments are allotted 60 minutes to allow the consultant to review the paper and then fill out the session report form that you will receive, with a summary of the consultant's feedback.
While we do want to help you be successful with your assignment, consultants cannot provide assistance for take-home midterms and/or final exams without the written consent of the instructor, who has said that it is acceptable for us to do so.
Come with specific questions about your writing. It’s a good idea to bring assignment sheets and guidelines and relevant course materials for the consultant to reference.
We welcome group-written assignments into the Center, but have a few requests to ensure that the session is most successful:
- indicate that multiple writers will be coming in when you make the appointment. We may move your session to a separate room (usually OC 215) so the focus can be on your assignment.
- plan your visit at a time where everyone in the group is available to come in. Doing so will ensure that the feedback will be productive and that each writer will be able to answer questions based on what they contributed.
- if only one writer is able to attend a session, we will only focus on the section that the attendee wrote. Why? Simply because our sessions involve lots of questions and answers, and if we ask questions about material that the attendee did not write, the answer is usually "I don't know," and thus, the consultant may not be able to give the best advice.