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  1. Waite, S. (2017). Teaching queer: Radical possibilities for writing and knowing. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: University of Pittsburgh.

    Waite, S. (2017). Teaching queer: Radical possibilities for writing and knowing. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: University of Pittsburgh.

    2025-07-10 17:50:27 | Review | Contributor(s): Brittany Amell | https://doi.org/10.31468/cjsdwr.739

    I started reading “Teaching Queer: Radical Possibilities for Writing and Knowing” on an unusually warm day in April, peacefully sitting outside on my blanket under a tree. Now covered in tree sap, the book sticks to my desk, requiring a firm but gentle nudge to remove it. The sap also obscures...

  2. Students Speak Out: The Impact of Participation in an Undergraduate Research Journal

    Students Speak Out: The Impact of Participation in an Undergraduate Research Journal

    2025-07-10 17:50:26 | Article | Contributor(s): Jordana Garbati, Esther Brockett | https://doi.org/10.31468/cjsdwr.618

    Universities are places where writing plays a central role in knowledge creation and dissemination (Graves, 2011). Students engage with writing in their courses, at their institution’s Writing Centre, and, perhaps more recently, in co-curricular projects such as an undergraduate research...

  3. Writing in Graduate School: A Found Poem

    Writing in Graduate School: A Found Poem

    2025-07-10 17:50:26 | Article | Contributor(s): Andrea R Olinger | https://doi.org/10.31468/cjsdwr.593

    The author presents and reflects on a found poem she composed from the final papers of students in her multidisciplinary graduate writing class.

  4. Introduction: Selected Papers from the 2017 Canadian Writing Centres Association Conference

    Introduction: Selected Papers from the 2017 Canadian Writing Centres Association Conference

    2025-07-10 17:50:26 | Article | Contributor(s): Kathy Block, Clare Bermingham, Jordana Garbati | https://doi.org/10.31468/cjsdwr.725

    Our 2017 CWCA conference took place on Canada’s 150th anniversary, and these two themes threaded through the conference, connecting with other discussions about our students’ diverse identities and histories that they bring to tutoring sessions in their languages, their stories, and their...

  5. The Languages We May Be: Affiliative Relations and the Work of the Canadian Writing Centre

    The Languages We May Be: Affiliative Relations and the Work of the Canadian Writing Centre

    2025-07-10 17:50:26 | Article | Contributor(s): Frankie Condon | https://doi.org/10.31468/cjsdwr.627

    This essay explores the possibility of imagining Canadian writing centres as sites wherein the Canadian commitment to multiculturalism and human rights may be more fully enacted and our country’s historical injustices may be addressed through the collective labours of writing centre scholars,...

  6. Intersections between Tutorial Engagement, Directive Feedback, and Critical Reflection

    Intersections between Tutorial Engagement, Directive Feedback, and Critical Reflection

    2025-07-10 17:50:26 | Article | Contributor(s): Gail Nash, Morgan Dawson, Kaine Gulozer | https://doi.org/10.31468/cjsdwr.616

    A handful of research studies have investigated the effect of writing centre tutorials on subsequent revisions. This classroom-based study adds to that research by reporting results from a collaborative study between a composition professor and a writing centre tutor. The aim of the study was...

  7. The Grammar of Social Justice: Gender Non-Binary Pronouns and the Writing Centre

    The Grammar of Social Justice: Gender Non-Binary Pronouns and the Writing Centre

    2025-07-10 17:50:26 | Article | Contributor(s): Travis Sharp, Karen Rosenberg | https://doi.org/10.31468/cjsdwr.615

    This paper discusses our writing centre’s outreach to trans and gender non-conforming students on our campus and the subsequent responses to this. Specifically, our writing centre embarked on an outreach campaign through promotional materials and sponsored events. During and following the 2016...

  8. Drawing as a Way of Knowing: Visual Practices as the Route to Becoming Academic

    Drawing as a Way of Knowing: Visual Practices as the Route to Becoming Academic

    2025-07-10 17:50:25 | Article | Contributor(s): Sandra Abegglen, Tom Burns, Sandra Sinfield | https://doi.org/10.31468/cjsdwr.600

    This case study illustrates what happened when we took a playful approach in a first year undergraduate academic skills module and a graduate Facilitating Student Learning module asking our students to “draw to learn.” We found that they not only enjoyed the challenges we set them, but also...

  9. “I am Done with Toys!” — The Benefits, Joys and Risks of Creativity and Innovation in Graduate Writing Support

    “I am Done with Toys!” — The Benefits, Joys and Risks of Creativity and Innovation in Graduate Writing Support

    2025-07-10 17:50:25 | Article | Contributor(s): Zoe Jones, Nonia Williams | https://doi.org/10.31468/cjsdwr.602

    Writing is a necessary part of the graduate student’s journey; it can also be a stressful and frustrating one that leaves students feeling “stuck” and disheartened. In this article we discuss four playful and alternative strategies that aim to free-up and inspire our graduate writers: our use...

  10. Autonomous Writing Groups and Radical Equality: An Innovative Approach to University Writing

    Autonomous Writing Groups and Radical Equality: An Innovative Approach to University Writing

    2025-07-10 17:50:24 | Article | Contributor(s): Katrin Girgensohn, Felicitas Macgilchrist | https://doi.org/10.31468/cjsdwr.586

    This paper presents a program for a university writing group, ran as a trial in Germany, that differs from common writing groups by allowing writers a high level of autonomy and choice. To theoretically frame this writing group model, we draw on the French philosopher Jacques Rancière and his...

  11. Engaging with Play and Graduate Writing Development

    Engaging with Play and Graduate Writing Development

    2025-07-10 17:50:24 | Article | Contributor(s): Brittany Amell, Eve-Marie C. Blouin-Hudon | https://doi.org/10.31468/cjsdwr.606

    We begin by situating this work and ourselves in graduate writing. Although our experiences as burgeoning researchers are not a focus of this article, we are nonetheless present in the background, not unlike a palimpsest. We trace one aspect of this palimpsest—the use of playful and creative...

  12. Scenes from Graduate School: Playing in the Smooth Spaces of Academic Writing

    Scenes from Graduate School: Playing in the Smooth Spaces of Academic Writing

    2025-07-10 17:50:24 | Article | Contributor(s): Nancy Bray | https://doi.org/10.31468/cjsdwr.590

    In this essay, I describe how I have experienced difficulties writing in particular academic genres. Finding spaces to play in these genres has helped me to ease these difficulties and negotiate the conflicts and contradictions of the academy. To explore and explain innovative spaces within...

  13. Emotions, Play and Graduate Student Writing

    Emotions, Play and Graduate Student Writing

    2025-07-10 17:50:24 | Article | Contributor(s): Cecile Badenhorst | https://doi.org/10.31468/cjsdwr.625

    While playfulness is important to graduate writing to shift students into new ways of thinking about their research, a key obstacle to having fun is writing anxiety. Writing is emotional, and despite a growing field of research that attests to this, emotions are often not explicitly recognized...

  14. A Contemplative Approach to Graduate Writing Development: Reflections from Thai Writing Classrooms

    A Contemplative Approach to Graduate Writing Development: Reflections from Thai Writing Classrooms

    2025-07-10 17:50:24 | Article | Contributor(s): James Burford, Adisorn Juntrasook, Wasana Sriprachya-anunt, Linda Yeh | https://doi.org/10.31468/cjsdwr.599

    This article addresses an under-researched area of writing studies: the use of contemplative pedagogies in the development of graduate writing. Drawing on reflective analysis from writing instructors, this article seeks to both contextualize the teaching and learning of writing in the Thai...

  15. Introduction to the Special Section of Conference Proceedings from the 2018 Canadian Writing Centres Association

    Introduction to the Special Section of Conference Proceedings from the 2018 Canadian Writing Centres Association

    2025-07-10 17:50:23 | Article | Contributor(s): Nadine Fladd, Liv C Marken | https://doi.org/10.31468/cjsdwr.813

    In this special section of the Canadian Journal for the Study of Discourse and Writing/ Rédactologie (CJSDW/R), we are pleased to share three articles that were originally presented at the 2018 Canadian Writing Centres Association / L’Association canadienne des centres de rédaction (CWCA/ACCR)...

  16. 2018 Year-End Editorial

    2018 Year-End Editorial

    2025-07-10 17:50:23 | Essay | Contributor(s): Taylor Morphett | https://doi.org/10.31468/cjsdwr.749

    I am thrilled to be writing 2018’s Year-End Editorial for CJSDW/R. One of the (many) benefits to working on an ongoing open access journal is that the editorial occurs after the volume is complete. This allows for a review of the year that considers how the published pieces connect to one...

  17. Cross-border teaching experiences in Canada and the U.S.: A writing teacher reflects

    Cross-border teaching experiences in Canada and the U.S.: A writing teacher reflects

    2025-07-10 17:50:23 | Article | Contributor(s): Laura Dunbar | https://doi.org/10.31468/cjsdwr.763

    A writing teacher reflects on her professional experiences in the U.S. and in Canada. This personal narrative focuses on the incongruencies the practitioner notices between faculty representation and program recognition in her roles first as a Limited Term Appointment Assistant Professor of...

  18. Writing as Responsive, Situated Practice: The Case for Rhetoric in Canadian Writing Studies

    Writing as Responsive, Situated Practice: The Case for Rhetoric in Canadian Writing Studies

    2025-07-10 17:50:23 | Article | Contributor(s): Michael Lukas, Tim Personn | https://doi.org/10.31468/cjsdwr.779

    This article responds to a widely held presumption that ineffective student writing in Canadian classrooms can be resolved through technical solutions on the model of the popular Grammarly app. In contrast, this article suggests that a solution to the problem of writing instruction should...

  19. Surface and Depth: Metalanguage and Professional Development in Canadian Writing Studies

    Surface and Depth: Metalanguage and Professional Development in Canadian Writing Studies

    2025-07-10 17:50:23 | Article | Contributor(s): Katja Thieme | https://doi.org/10.31468/cjsdwr.757

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  20. What Every Writing Teacher Should Know and Be Able to Do: Reading Outcomes for Faculty Members

    What Every Writing Teacher Should Know and Be Able to Do: Reading Outcomes for Faculty Members

    2025-07-10 17:50:23 | Article | Contributor(s): Alice Horning

    The need for much better preparation of faculty on reading arises from evidence in three areas: students’ problems with critical reading and thinking, lack of extant faculty preparation in reading pedagogy, and an absence of focused faculty development to improve student reading. Many recent...