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York Faculty and Librarians Team-Teaching
in the Professional Writing Program
In the fall term of 2003 Janet Webber
(Special Assistant Professor, Division of Humanities
and Centre for Academic Writing) and Scott McLaren (Humanities
and Religious Studies Librarian) began team-teaching
the newly minted course AS/WRIT2300 A Writer's Introduction
to Research. Co-designed by Scott and Janet during
the previous academic year, this is one of several required
core courses for students enrolled in the Faculty of
Arts' new Professional Writing Program. The educational
value of this faculty/librarian collaboration is apparent
both in the course's comprehensive learning outcomes
and in its seamless integration into the wider professional
writing curriculum.
A practical introduction to strategies
for using library, online and other resources, this
course is intended to develop students' abilities to
formulate research plans, to evaluate and organize information,
and to present it effectively and responsibly. The course
focuses on developing the research skills needed by
professional writers working in non-academic settings.
It approaches both research and writing as recursive,
problem-solving processes, seeing research as part of
the writing process. Thus it places the formulation
of research plans and research questions within the
context of overall rhetorical planning for a piece of
writing.
Students are taught how to develop search
strategies and techniques for using libraries, the Internet
and other sources, such as archives and people, to find
answers to their questions. As students learn to integrate
what they have found in their sources into their own
writing, special emphasis is placed on the need to evaluate
sources critically and methods for doing so, as well
as on the ethical and legal issues involved. This process
culminates in the writing of an article based on research
for which students must first submit an extensive annotated
bibliography.
The course operates through a combination
of formal lectures and lab tutorials in alternate weeks.
Each pairing of lecture and lab is used first to introduce
students to the literature of a different academic discipline
and the formats of literature available through specialized
sources and then give hands-on experience with this
material in the lab. Disciplines and formats covered
include the humanities, social sciences, science and
medicine, business and industry, Canadian and international
government documents, statistical resources, and archival
materials. In order to cover this very broad range of
disciplines the instructors have been fortunate to be
able to call on the expertise of a number of librarians
for guest lectures, assignment design consultation,
and hands-on assistance in labs. Librarians who contributed
to the course in this way include John Dupuis (Science),
Elizabeth Watson (Business), Sophie Bury (Business),
Amanda Wakaruk (Government Documents), Walter Giesbrecht
(Data and Statistics), and Suzanne Dubeau (Archives
and Special Collections).
Informal feedback from students has been
very positive; one recently remarked that this course
was her favourite because what she learned in it could
be applied to every other course that she was currently
taking. The instructors have observed both the growing
sophistication of critical research skills in student
assignments and the students' own sense of their increasing
competence. Projected enrollment for the 2004/2005 academic
year is more than 100 students.
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