3 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Opening Closed Doors: A Rationale for Creating a Safe Space for Tutors Struggling with Mental Health Concerns or Illnesses
Because writing centers exist to help students find success in academia—to enter doors that may otherwise be closed to them—writing center literature rightly discusses the need to work with students of all backgrounds and abilities (Pemberton; Neff; Hamel). Writing center personnel have written about how writing centers and other campus resources can support students with disabilities (Hewett; Logan; Zimmerman), as well as the diverse ways in which these students learn and what we, in turn, can learn from them. The field actively recognizes that writing centers and student support centers in general are actually engaging in political advocacy, a fact that has been noted in this very publication.University Writing Cente
Recommended from our members
Praxis, Volume 13, No. 01: Dis/Ability in the Writing Center
Contents: From the Editors -- Equity and Ability: Metaphors of Inclusion in Writing Center Promotion -- The Online Writing Center: Reaching Out to Students with Disabilities -- English for All: The Importance of Pedagogical Strategies for Students with Learning -- Disabilities in the Writing Center -- Disability in the Writing Center: A New Approach (That’s Not So New) -- Psychological Disability and the Director’s Chair: Interrogating the Relationship Between -- Positionality and Pedagogy -- Writing Centers and Disability: Enabling Writers Through an Inclusive Philosophy -- Opening Closed Doors: A Rationale for Creating a Safe Space for Tutors Struggling with Mental Illness Concerns or Illnesses -- Disabilities in the Writing CenterUniversity Writing Cente