Student Information
Want to be tutored, but have no idea what
a tutoring session will be like? Drop by the Writing Center
and look through the files of report forms to get a general
idea of how a tutoring session works.
One of the many resources available in the
Writing Center (Mudd 201) is the file of past writing associate report
forms. These forms were filled out by past writing associates, dating
back to Fall 2000, and they provide specific information about
individual tutoring sessions. The forms are filed by department
(i.e. English, Politics, Economics) in the yellow box on the
bookcase.
What happens in a tutoring conference?
You, the tutee, ultimately determine what happens
in a tutoring conference. Writing associates work with the goals, priorities,
and strengths of each individual student. Sessions can include
everything from scanning for grammar to discussing larger
issues like organizing ideas, figuring out whether arguments
make sense, or coming up with topics.
Many writing associates begin by asking you to read your
paper aloud. After that, the writing associate will probably ask if you
had any specific concerns about the paper and the session
will go from there. The best tutoring sessions tend to be
informal conversations about your paper and your ideas.
What should I do to prepare for my tutoring
conference?
These tips may help you to get more out of tutoring
conferences:
*Bring a copy of the paper assignment your professor
gave you (or at least be able to describe it).
*You might also want to bring an extra copy
of your paper for the writing associate to read and write on. By the way,
feel free to come in without a paper if you want to discuss
topics or general ideas.
*Read your paper a few minutes before the conference.
If it's fresh in your mind, it will be easier to talk about.
*Think of questions to ask or problems to discuss.
Here are three common questions to get you started:
1) What do you think the paper says? How would
you describe the main idea?
2) What are the strengths of the paper?
3) What are the weaknesses? Do you have any suggestions for
improvement?
*Try to leave yourself plenty of time for revision
after the conference.
*Try not to take the writing associate's comments as an
insult or a personal criticism. If a suggestion seems wrong
to you, try asking the writing associate to explain why s/he made it.
In the end, you are free to accept or reject anything the
writing associate says. It's your writing.
|