Creating conditions for working collaboratively in discipline-based writing at a South African university
Keywords
writing centreswriting in the disciplines
transformation of higher education
academic literacies
epistemological access
writing consultants
assessment for learning
collaborative pedagogy
Language and Literature
P
African languages and literature
PL8000-8844
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Students’ academic literacy practices frequently do not prepare them for, or articulate with, the ways of thinking and practising within their chosen academic disciplines (Boughey, 2010; Clarence, 2010; Wingate & Tribble, 2012). There has been much debate about who should be responsible for responding to this ‘articulation gap’ (Bitzer, 2009) and how this should be done. In this paper, we posit the importance of working with students in the disciplines and draw on Lillis and Scott’s (2007) notion of transformative writing spaces to engage critically with disciplinary culture, norms and practices. We critique ‘remedial’ approaches to tertiary writing development that treat the articulation gap as a skills deficit that can be overcome by teaching a set of requisite academic literacy skills. We also suggest that increased collaboration between writing centres and discipline-based academic staff has helped to shift the deficit conception to more socially constructed approaches to writing development. We explore conditions in two discipline-specific writing centres that show how writing can be used as a way of engaging all students with core course concepts and in which writing development has been embedded within mainstream, substantive modules in order to facilitate epistemological access (Morrow, 2007) to both disciplinary content and writing in the discourse.Date
2019-09-01Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:doaj.org/article:337041caf5064261a68d7509a2f6bf2f10.5785/35-1-851
0259-2312
2224-0012
https://doaj.org/article/337041caf5064261a68d7509a2f6bf2f