WAC: Writing Intensive Certification Colloquium
N-605Date: Thursday, May 12, 2016 Time: 1:00 pm - 2:15 pm Room: Namm 605
Date: Thursday, May 12, 2016 Time: 1:00 pm - 2:15 pm Room: Namm 605
Developing effective reading and writing assignments helps students retain and critically think about course content. This workshop will cover a number of assignment design strategies that emphasize active learning through student writing. Faculty are encouraged to bring an assignment prompt they would like to revise.
As instructors, we often don’t think about plagiarism until after it happens. This workshop will provide tools to help instructors discuss academic integrity in their classes, design plagiarism-resistant assignments, and utilize campus resources to address the roots of plagiarism. RSVP: Faculty Commons (facultycommons@citytech.cuny.edu) Room now changed to Namm 601A
Looking for innovative ways to increase student participation and improve learning outcomes? In this workshop, we share both high-tech and no-tech strategies you can implement in your classroom to reinforce WAC practices and promote active learning. RSVP: facultycommons@citytech.cuny.edu
What is writing-intensive instruction and how does it work across the disciplines? One of the challenges in approaching this question is developing a syllabus that weaves together course content with WAC principles that improve students' writing and facilitates their writing process. In this workshop, we will suggest critical elements for crafting syllabi for writing-intensive courses
More than two-thirds of undergraduates at City Tech are not native English speakers. In this workshop, we will discuss ways that WAC philosophy can address and accommodate these students, and give you concrete strategies for assignment design and grading. RSVP: facultycommons@citytech.cuny.edu
Join us as this year’s Writing Intensive Certification program participants share reworked syllabi and assignments and speak about how Writing Across the Curriculum philosophy influenced their approach to teaching. Come be inspired by your fellow faculty, and learn about how you can participate in next year’s program.
As instructors, we often don’t think about plagiarism until after it happens. This workshop will provide tools to help instructors discuss academic integrity in their classes, design plagiarism-resistant assignments, and utilize campus resources to address the roots of plagiarism. Open to all City Tech faculty and staff.