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―The Vertical Writing Curriculum,‖ 1
“The Vertical Writing Curriculum: Integrating and Aligning Writing Instruction at ECU”
Summary
In response to concerns about students‘ performance in upper-division, major-specific Writing Intensive (WI)
courses and about their preparedness for writing in the workplace, we propose a multifaceted revision of the
Writing Across the Curriculum program, including the first-year composition courses, English 1100 and 1200
(hereafter called the Writing Foundations courses to better reflect their role in the Liberal Arts Foundations
Curriculum and in the Writing Across the Curriculum program). More specifically, we suggest increased
integration of the University Writing Program and the Writing Foundations Program through professional
development for WI faculty and University Writing Center staff, a change in the timing and focus of the second
Writing Foundations course (English 1200), and the implementation of portfolio-based writing assessment across
Writing Foundations and WI courses.
Student Learning
This QEP promotes effective transfer of student learning in the area of writing through a three-pronged approach
that will do the following:
1. Distribute and deliver writing instruction more strategically throughout students‘ academic experiences at ECU.
Changes to English 1200 would involve shifting the course to the sophomore year and creating disciplinary-
themed curricula (e.g., ―Writing about the Health Sciences,‖ ―Writing about the Humanities,‖ ―Writing about
the Social Sciences,‖ ―Writing about Education,‖ etc.) that would better enable students to transfer what they
learn in English 1100 and 1200 to the writing they do in upper-division courses in their majors. This revised
course would also better allow students to see connections between their major areas and the Foundations
Curriculum.
2. Increase, through professional development, faculty and tutors‘ ability to draw on what students learn about
writing in their Writing Foundations courses.
3. Create additional, productive opportunities for students to develop meta-cognitive awareness of what effective
writers do. More specifically, the creation of common, portfolio-based assessment procedures for both the
Writing Foundations and WI courses will create spaces in which students apply and reflect on writing strategies
across contexts and purposes, and thus establish better transfer of learning.
This approach aligns well with all of the strategic directions outlined in ECU Tomorrow. Graduates who can write
effectively for a variety of audiences, purposes, and situations will be better prepared to succeed in the global
economy, obtain leadership positions, and contribute to the arts, culture, quality of life, healthcare needs, and
economic prosperity of Eastern North Carolina and beyond.
Research in the development of writing abilities supports the curricular revisions that we propose. Becoming a
better writer requires multiple, consistent opportunities to learn about, practice, and reflect on writing in various
contexts and across all levels of the academy (Bergmann & Zepernik; Brent; Carroll; Haswell; Herrington &
Curtis; McCarthy; Nelms & Dively; Smit; Sternglass; Walvoord & McCarthy; Wardle). As Perkins and Salomon
explain, ―Practice that occurs in a variety of somewhat related and expanding contexts will force the cognitive
element in question to adapt in subtle ways to each of these new contexts, yielding an incrementally broadening
ability‖ (―The Science and Art,‖ 120). Currently, as we discuss below, this variety of related and expanding
contexts for developing writing abilities is lacking at ECU.
Furthermore, the literature suggests that students learn and perform better when they have a stronger investment
in their coursework. Student investment requires a belief that the material being covered will be applicable in the
future and an interest in the subject matter being researched and written about (Ackerman; Daly; Penrose &
Geisler; Sommers). Thus, in shifting the timing and focus of the second Writing Foundations course so that
students take it when they are more comfortable with the university and more aware of their plans therein, we are
likely to increase student engagement with and retention of the writing strategies they are taught.
―The Vertical Writing Curriculum,‖ 2
The literature on transfer of learning also supports the professional development we envision as part of this QEP.
Research suggests that instructors, in order to enable transfer, must frequently and consistently emphasize when
and how it can occur (Brent; Carter; Greeno, et. al; Mikulecky, et al; Perkins & Salomon). Strategies for guiding
transfer are what we intend to emphasize in workshops and other programs for faculty and tutors.
The portfolio-based assessment structure we propose, and that is elaborated below, is also supported in the
literature (Beaufort; Broad; Huot; Huot, O‘Neill & Schendel; Smith & Yancey; Wardle; Yancey). We envision an
assessment structure in which students, both in their Writing Foundations courses and throughout their WI
courses, compile a writing portfolio with several sections, each of which will be framed by reflective cover letters
in which students identify, discuss, and evaluate the writing strategies they have employed in their work. Not only
will these portfolios provide materials for assessment, but they will also serve as sites for students to develop the
kind of meta-cognitive awareness recommended in research on writing-knowledge transfer (Brent; Davies &
Birbili; Perkins & Salomon; Nelms & Dively; Tishman, Jay, & Perkins).
In sum, the literature suggests that the proposed changes will positively impact student learning. Best practices in
writing instruction, based on this literature, also speak to the effectiveness of integrating writing instruction and
systematic reflection on writing practices across all years of a student‘s university experience.
Significance and Urgency
Assessment data from the Writing Foundations courses and the WAC Program both suggest the need for a better
understanding of writing at the campus level. A ―sophomore year writing gap‖ currently exists between when
students take their Writing Foundations courses and when they are asked to transfer what they have learned to
upper-level WI courses. Student learning is hampered by this gap. At the same time, the gap—both in terms of
timing and curriculum—between the Writing Foundations courses and upper-level WI courses reinforces the
unfortunate but common perception among students that there is little value to what they learn in the Writing
Foundations courses beyond satisfying a university requirement. Our current curricular structure, in other words,
does not provide students with a clear means to see how the ability to write critically and effectively for a broad
audience can serve as a foundation for the ability to write effectively for more specialized audiences. Nor does
this current curriculum demonstrate clearly for students how important it is for specialists to be able to
communicate effectively with one another and with broader audiences. In response, we propose to revise English
1200 so that it becomes a space where students can consider, compare, contrast, and even critique the habits of
thinking and ways of writing within specialized fields. In addition to fostering dispositions toward research-based
writing that students might take into their upper-level WI courses, this revised English 1200 might serve as a
location where students can explore the complexities of how specialized knowledge gets transmitted to broader
national and international audiences.
In addition to anecdotal evidence from faculty across the curriculum who report with regularity that their students
are not strong writers, a recent assessment of ENGL 1200 demonstrated that students, while improving in several
areas involving the use of secondary research in their writing, struggled significantly with paraphrasing sources,
even at the conclusion of the course. There are several possible reasons for this unsatisfactory performance, but
one reason suggested by research in the composing processes of novice and experienced writers is that students
new to the university are accustomed to viewing sources as things to be reported on rather than as things to be
questioned, refuted and/or used as support for one‘s own argument (Penrose and Geisler; Sommer & Salz;
Herrington & Curtis). Not until students have some more experience with academic and disciplinary
conversations can they begin to see how to use information and perspectives from sources. Shifting ENGL 1200
to the sophomore year, and creating curricula that take up disciplinary conversations, is one way that the Writing
Foundations courses can facilitate this move from novice to experienced writer.
Furthermore, the Writing Intensive Course Report compiled by the University Writing Program noted that faculty
understandings of ―good writing‖ vary significantly by department and college, suggesting that there is little sense
of consistency among faculty regarding expectations in writing and writing-intensive courses. This lack of
consistency is appropriate given the different contexts and purposes of writing, but it can be confusing to students
if these differences are not carefully and meaningfully articulated. In fact, students surveyed noted their own
―The Vertical Writing Curriculum,‖ 3
perception that ―good writing‖ is ―good writing‖ across contexts, which suggests a lack of awareness that
audience, purpose, and context all contribute to making writing effective in a given situation. Recent assessments
of writing intensive courses in the WAC program also demonstrate that a Kurtosis risk exists in these courses,
e.g., the median GPA across all sections of WI courses from fall 2007 - fall 2009 is 3.2. This suggests that despite
faculty perception that students are weak writers, their WI course grades do not demonstrate (or perhaps address)
that weakness. These assessments suggest that WI faculty would benefit from professional development that
explore these issues and provide methods for better articulating writing outcomes and objectives in WI courses.
Description and Scope
The QEP we propose includes the following major tasks:
1. Hold meetings among WI instructors, University Writing Program staff, the Director of Writing Foundations,
and Writing Foundations instructors to help WI instructors better understand what students are prepared to do
upon completion of the Foundations courses.
2. Shift the timing of English 1200 so that students take the course after they have completed 30 semester hours.
3. Develop disciplinary themes for English 1200 and train faculty to teach them.
4. Conduct professional development programs for instructors of upper-level WI courses and tutors at the
University Writing Center in order to foster instructional practices that promote transfer of learning. The
University Writing Program and the Office for Faculty Excellence could collaborate in the design and
implementation of these programs.
5. Design and implement portfolio-based assessment procedures in the Writing Foundations courses and
throughout WI courses.
Given ECU‘s Writing Foundations and WI course requirements, this QEP would affect every student who earns a
degree from the university. The Composition Committee from the Department of English, along with the Writing
Across the Curriculum (WAC) Committee, will coordinate with all of the departments. All departments would be
involved in some capacity as each offers WI courses. Because the proposed changes would require revision to the
Foundations Curriculum, the Academic Standards Committee and the Faculty Senate would also participate in the
proposed QEP. Thus, a wide cross-section of faculty would be involved. We also see faculty from Academic
Library Services as critical to this QEP, and they have contributed to this proposal some ideas for the design,
implementation, and assessment of library instruction for disciplinary-themed English 1200s (see appendices).
Assessment
Key to the success of this QEP would be both formative and summative assessments which would analyze the
teaching of writing across campus as well as the effectiveness of that instruction on student writing itself. In the
recent past, the Writing Foundations courses have been assessed annually through the review of student writing
samples, gathered from randomly selected sections of each course, or through end-of-semester quizzes, and the
WAC program has focused its assessment practices primarily on faculty development and direct services for
students through the University Writing Center. Research has repeatedly demonstrated, however, that portfolios
provide a richer context for assessment of student writing abilities than do these other mechanisms. Portfolios, the
literature suggests, provide more reliable data for assessing students‘ writing abilities than do timed writing tests
or final writing assignments from a particular class. It is across multiple contexts that a writer‘s abilities are more
effectively demonstrated (Beaufort; Broad; Huot; Huot, O‘Neill & Schendel; Rutz & Grawe; Smith & Yancey;
Thomas; Yancey). For this reason, other UNC system schools and many of ECU‘s peer institutions use a
portfolio system for writing program assessment (Appalachian State, Western Carolina University, Florida
International University, Northern Illinois University, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, University of
Louisville, and SUNY Buffalo). In addition, it is for this reason that the National Council of Teachers of English
provides a list of 25 composition e-portfolio models at schools around the country
(http://www.ncte.org/cccc/resources/positions/electronicportfolios.).
In addition to the more reliable data that can be gathered through portfolio-based formative assessment, the
Writing Foundations curriculum and the WI curriculum can achieve more effective vertical alignment through
―The Vertical Writing Curriculum,‖ 4
such assessment. The primary means for achieving this alignment will be the development of a University Writing
Portfolio (using iwebfolio) for all ECU students.
The University Writing Portfolio, for students who enter the university as first-semester, first-year students, will
include the following writing artifacts:
1. Items from the freshman year: Each student in English 1100 will submit selected materials from 1100 at the end
of the course. Instructors of English 1100 will require that students submit this material as part of their
coursework, most likely as the final, graded assignment in the course. This portfolio will include written
assignments from the course that, in the student‘s opinion, best demonstrate her or his ability to meet the
program-wide outcomes of the course, which are listed on each instructor‘s syllabus and which inform the
portfolio rubrics for each class (see appendices). In addition, each portfolio will be accompanied by a brief
analytical cover letter in which the student explains the writing strategies he or she used in the materials. This
cover letter will be used to determine how aware students are of their choices and abilities as writers (see a
sample rubric in the appendices). As explained above, such meta-awareness enables the transfer of writing
abilities to new contexts.
2. Items from the sophomore year: Each student in English 1200 will submit selected materials from 1200 at the
end of the course. These items will be selected by the students and submitted in a manner similar to that used in
selecting the material for inclusion in the first year. The materials will also be accompanied by a brief,
analytical cover letter.
3. Items from the junior and/or senior year: Methods for identifying and gathering materials from upper-level WI
courses will be developed by the WAC committee in conjunction with the QEP Director and the QEP Council.
Assessment of the University Writing Portfolio will take place in three separate but related steps:
1. Assessment of the Writing Foundations Courses: The Composition Committee—the body in the English
Department that, in conjunction with the Director of Composition, develops, reviews, and establishes course
outcomes, curriculum, and assessment processes for English 1100 and 1200—has developed rubrics to guide
the assessment of the Writing Foundations courses (see appendices). These rubrics draw on the statement of key
learning outcomes established by the Council of Writing Program Administrators (CWPA), an international
professional organization of directors of writing programs and research faculty in writing studies
(http://wpacouncil.org/positions/outcomes.html). These outcomes focus on (1) rhetorical knowledge, (2) critical
thinking, reading, and writing, (3) knowledge of writing processes, (4) knowledge of conventions, and (5)
understanding electronic writing environments, all of which the CWPA has identified as essential for effective
general education writing courses. When English 1200 is shifted to the sophomore year and refocused on
disciplinary themes, the English 1200 portfolio rubric will be revised to include outcomes focused on students
demonstrating greater understanding of how writing functions within specific disciplines and a metacognitive
awareness of how dispositions learned in English 1200 might transfer to upper-level WI courses.
As per the assessment guidelines for Foundations courses established by the Faculty Senate, a random sample
of 20% of portfolios submitted for either 1100 or 1200 will be assessed over the summer by a group of trained
and compensated raters—drawn from among the English department‘s instructors of English 1100 and 1200
and interested WI faculty—using the appropriate rubric. Three different readers will review each portfolio to
ensure the consistent application of the rubrics. The results of the assessment will be entered into TracDat and
will be used to inform professional development programs for instructors of the Writing Foundations courses
and curricular design in the Writing Foundations courses.
2. Assessment of Upper-level WI Courses: The QEP will also provide the University Writing Program the
opportunity to expand the learning outcomes established by CWPA into discipline-specific contexts, and to
assess whether or not students at ECU are able to meet those outcomes during their time at the university. The
UWP is currently in the process of establishing a series of articulation meetings in 2011-2012 that will develop
discipline-specific writing outcomes, which can be used to assess student portfolios. For these meetings, the
UWP and members of the Composition Committee will meet with representatives from all departments on
―The Vertical Writing Curriculum,‖ 5
campus in order to better understand what different disciplines value in student writing. These meetings will
help us to articulate both cross-disciplinary and discipline-specific writing outcomes. Additionally, results from
these assessments will be useful to other departments/programs going through various review procedures to
document student learning. Because the portfolio system will retain student work linked to specific courses,
majors, and minors, we can filter assessment data for different constituencies.
3. Assessment of the Vertical Writing Curriculum: In addition to assessments of Writing Foundations courses and
upper-level WI courses, longitudinal assessments will be conducted to determine how effective the vertical
writing curriculum is. Every 5 years, a randomly selected sample of graduating seniors will be selected for the
following assessment process:
a. Students‘ portfolio materials from English 1200 and from their WI major area course(s) will be compared to
determine which aspects of writing, if any, the students struggled to transfer.
b. Surveys of students and major-area WI course instructors will be conducted to determine what, if anything,
students need in order to be better prepared through the vertical curriculum.
c. Interviews with selected students and faculty—perhaps in the form of focus groups—will be conducted to
determine how much of what students learned in their Writing Foundations courses transferred to WI courses
and what else might be done to foster student writing success.
A significant strength of this assessment procedure is that faculty in Writing Foundations and the WI program will
participate throughout, thus increasing cross-disciplinary articulation and providing greater transparency.
Schedule
As demonstrated in the schedule below, in order for there to be a sample of completed University Writing
Portfolios to report on in the 2017-2018 year, we will begin the shift in timing of English 1200 in fall 2012.
Year Activities
2011-12 In fall 2011, hold iwebfolio workshops for selected instructors whose students will be part of the
sample population to submit 1200 materials at the end of spring 2012 (see next bullet).
Implement iwebfolio component for a 25% sample of students completing 1200 in spring 2012.
The materials will serve as the basis for comparison to students who take the sophomore year,
discipline focused English 1200s starting in 2013-2014. In addition, this smaller scale
implementation will allow us to see and address any problems with the portfolio submission
process before the entire sophomore student population is asked to submit portfolio material at
the conclusion of English 1200 in the 2013-2014 AY.
Establish a series of articulation meetings in 2011–12. (See above)
2012-13 Hold iwebfolio workshops for all instructors of English 1100 and 1200 so that they know how to
use the system and how to guide their students in using it.
Implement shift of timing for English 1200: Entering freshmen will take English 1100 in fall
2012 or spring 2013.
In fall 2012 and spring 2013, develop and implement multiple, required professional
development workshops for teachers of English 1200 so that they are prepared to teach the
discipline-themed course for the first time in fall 2013. These workshops, which will also involve
upper-level WI faculty from across the university, would be held weekly or bi-weekly.
Begin professional development programs for faculty in upper-level WI courses and tutors at the
University Writing Center in order to foster instructional practices that promote transfer of
learning from English 1200 to WI courses. (Ongoing)
English 1100 component of students‘ University Writing Portfolios submitted for a 25% sample
of sections at the conclusion of English 1100. This smaller scale implementation will allow us to
see and address any problems with the process before the entire first-year student population is
―The Vertical Writing Curriculum,‖ 6
asked to submit portfolio material at the conclusion of English 1100 in the 2013-14 AY.
Program assessment for English 1100 in summer 2013 using English 1100 iwebfolio component.
Assessment of English 1100 iwebfolio components will take place every third year. (Ongoing)
2013-14
(Year 1,
QEP)
Continue implementation of shift in timing of English 1200. Students who enter as freshmen in
fall 2013 will take English 1100 in fall 2013 or spring 2014. Students who entered ECU as
freshmen in fall 2012 will take English 1200 in fall 2013 or spring 2014.
Implement discipline-focused English 1200 to student who entered ECU in fall 2012.
English 1100 component of students‘ University Writing Portfolios submitted for all students
entering as freshmen in fall 2013 or spring 2014 (this pattern will continue for each freshman
class).
Students who completed English 1200 as freshmen in spring 2012 submit materials from their
junior -year, major-specific WI courses to their University Writing Portfolios.
English 1200 component of the sophomores‘ University Writing Portfolios submitted at the
conclusion of English 1200 (this pattern will then continue for each sophomore class).
Program assessment for English 1200 in summer 2014 using English 1200 iwebfolio component.
Assessment of English 1200 iwebfolio components will take place every third year, starting this
year.
2014-15
(Year 2,
QEP)
Continue to offer English 1100 in fall and spring for incoming freshmen and English 1200 in fall
and spring for sophomores.
Students who entered as freshmen in fall 2012 submit materials from their junior-year, major-
specific WI courses to their University Writing Portfolios (this pattern will continue for each
junior class).
Students who completed English 1200 as freshmen in spring 2012 will submit materials from
their senior-year, major-specific WI courses to their University Writing Portfolios.
2015-16
(Year 3,
QEP)
Continue to offer English 1100 in fall and spring for incoming freshmen and English 1200 in fall
and spring for sophomores.
Students who entered as freshmen in fall 2012 will submit materials from their senior-year,
major-specific WI courses to their University Writing Portfolios (this pattern will then continue
for each senior class).
Program assessment for English 1100 in summer 2016 using English 1100 iwebfolio component.
Program assessment of WI course materials in summer 2016 using WI courses iwebfolio
component.
2016-17
(Year 4,
QEP)
Assessment of Vertical Writing Curriculum using all components of the University Writing
portfolio for students who graduated in 2015 and 2016, with a focus on comparing/contrasting
performance of those who took English 1200 prior to the switch in timing and focus and those
who took it after.
Program assessment for English 1200 in summer 2014 using English 1200 iwebfolio component.
2017-18 Create impact report for SACS
Risk Assessment
Pursuing a vertical writing program at ECU and implementing the faculty development and writing program
assessment proposed here is a natural outgrowth of ongoing planning and evaluation of student learning outcomes
related to their performance in writing courses. Several colleges have implemented portfolio assessment and
include writing courses at all levels of a college student‘s career in order to improve student writing. The
―The Vertical Writing Curriculum,‖ 7
initiatives discussed in this proposal are consistent with best practices in writing instruction
(www.ncte.org/cccc/resources/positions/electronicportfolios).
One issue that may be encountered in pursuing this QEP, however, involves assessment of transfer students and
those who receive advanced placement credit and thus do not take English 1200 at ECU. These students would
either have taken their Writing Foundations courses at other schools or not taken the courses (at least as designed
at ECU) at all. While at first appearing as a risk, this situation would allow us to make potentially useful
comparisons between students who take their Writing Foundations courses at ECU and those who place out of
them or take them at other institutions. A second issue might involve the use of iwebfolio by all students
beginning in 2012-2013. If the iwebfolio system cannot accommodate all of ECU‘s students at an affordable
price, we will need to investigate a technology solution that will.
Additionally, with the implementation of a ―vertical curriculum‖ that aims to help students move smoothly
through their Writing Foundations courses and into WI courses in their majors, both the UWP and the Writing
Foundations Program will need to monitor students‘ performance in WI courses that students might take outside
of their majors. In shifting the focus on English 1200 such that students are better prepared for writing in their
majors and their potential professions, we will need to ensure that they continue to receive adequate preparation to
write in non-major WI courses as well. A large part of this more general preparation for academic writing, broadly
defined, will come through English 1100, but we also intend to keep the outcomes of English 1200 broad enough
that the skills students learn as they research and write about issues specific to their majors will be transferrable to
other, non-major WI courses.
Commitment to and Support of the Topic
Anecdotal evidence continues to point to the fact that ECU faculty are deeply committed to improving the quality
of student writing. At present, two faculty committees exist to provide oversight and guidance to the Writing
Foundations program (Composition Committee) and to the Writing Across the Curriculum program (WAC
Committee). The Composition Committee, comprised of faculty in the English department and the Director of the
University Writing Program, develops curricula for English 1100 and 1200, and provides regular assessment of
course outcomes/objectives. Likewise, the WAC Committee serves as a faculty advisory committee to the
University Writing Program and provides oversight for the university‘s WI requirement. Chaired by the Director
of the University Writing Program, Dr. Will Banks, the committee is composed of faculty members from across
the university. Membership rotates on a regular basis, but currently involves the UWP Staff and tenure-stream
faculty from Thomas Harriot College of Arts and Sciences, College of Fine Arts and Communication, College of
Education, College of Human Ecology, and College of Nursing.
In addition to oversight provided by faculty across both East and West Campus, a diverse range of faculty
participate each Spring in the WAC Academy (formerly Writing Institute) sponsored by the University Writing
Program. In the last four years, over forty faculty representing every college/department on campus have
participated in the program; in their application materials, these faculty evince a strong commitment to teaching
writing in their disciplines and to improving student writing. After the WAC Academy, these faculty have become
strong advocates for WI courses in their home departments.
Some faculty may be concerned that moving English 1200 to the sophomore year will disrupt student progress
through their intended majors. Currently, only six courses in the ECU catalogue (outside English) require English
1200 as a prerequisite, which suggests that moving English 1200 to the sophomore year will not significantly
prevent students from enrolling in other courses in their majors. Attention will need to be paid to helping campus
advisors guide their students through this new process and to select courses in their majors carefully. Some
departments may want to reconsider whether the current English 1200 prerequisite is still relevant.
One obvious barrier to support from the broader faculty is that teaching and evaluating writing is time-consuming,
and for many faculty, time spent instructing students on writing in their discipline may seem to take time from
content instruction. This concern, however, is not a new one, and it is something that the Director and the staff of
the UWP will continue to address through ongoing professional development opportunities such as workshops in
which WI faculty can explore methods for ―writing to learn‖ and ―writing in the discipline‖ that work to increase
―The Vertical Writing Curriculum,‖ 8
content knowledge/retention among students. Research on writing-to-learn and on student learning continues to
highlight the value that such activities have for helping students to master content knowledge (Carroll; Haswell;
Herrington & Curtis; McCarthy; Nelms & Dively; Smit; Sternglass; Walvoord & McCarthy).
One other barrier from faculty may be a concern for how to get their students to submit their writing to the
portfolio. This is a concern for us, too, and we are already working with Matt Long, ECU‘s iwebfolio manager, to
discern the best approach. But we also know that many departments and colleges on campus already make use of
online and print portfolio systems, so we believe this QEP will capitalize on these existing expectations and
expand them to the wider student body.
Another, related barrier is the amount of time necessary for instructors of English 1100 and 1200 to learn the
technology (iwebfolio) and to restructure and refocus English1200 so that it meets the goals of the vertical
curriculum. As our schedule above indicates, we plan to offer intensive, mandatory professional development
workshops in AY 2012-2013 to address both of these concerns. We do not anticipate that these intensive
workshops will put an undue burden on our Writing Foundations instructors; a reduction in the number of English
1200 sections offered during this transition year will provide them with the time that they need to participate fully
in this essential professional development.
Implementation Resource Requirements/Plan Development Process
Given the University Writing Program, the Writing Foundations courses (ENGL 1100 & 1200), and the WI
course requirements for students, an existing infrastructure exists to implement this QEP; however, increased
resources both in personnel and compensation would be needed to further develop and succeed with this plan.
The university would need to support iwebfolio accounts for all students beginning in 2011 for the incoming
class. The number of accounts per year would increase each year after that. Matt Long is checking on the license
and feasibility of these issues.
This QEP plan also requires summer stipends for faculty to conduct portfolio assessments each summer,
beginning the first year of the QEP and increasing each year in response to the need for portfolio reviews after the
sophomore year and then at graduation. Portfolios will be sampled, but for this plan to work, faculty will need to
be trained to do portfolio assessment and compensated for the training and the work they complete.
We also see at least 2, maybe 3, new positions needed as part of the QEP planning and implementation process.
One writing portfolio application expert would be needed given the increased number of student and faculty users.
A non-teaching EPA position would also be needed to help train faculty throughout the QEP implementation and
to coordinate the logistics with staff involved in the current assessment practices.
To increase buy-in from WI instructors, we might also expand the WAC Academy to help train and persuade
faculty to improve their teaching and evaluation of writing. Currently, the WAC Academy offers ten WI course
instructors from across the disciplines the opportunity to improve their teaching of writing and knowledge of
WAC, WID, and WI courses at ECU each Spring Semester with the incentive of $500 upon the completion of the
six week institute. The University Writing Program would like to expand the Academy to include a fall Academy.
This addition would allow ten more faculty members from across the disciplines to participate in this intensive
faculty development. We would also like to expand participant roles to be WI leaders in their departments,
running faculty workshop on writing in their home department, being compensated for the workshops they run,
and improving writing instruction in WI courses.
Available ECU Expertise
Will Banks—As Associate Director of Composition at ECU from 2004 - 2010 and as the current Interim Director
of the University Writing Program, I have seen writing instruction and student writing performance as it exists in
both the Foundations curriculum and the WAC program, and I have participated in the assessment of both. From
this vantage point, I can envision how this QEP would provide ECU with an unprecedented moment of focus for
reshaping curricula and improving the writing our students do at all levels. Additionally, I have six years of
experience administering writing programs and writing centers at other universities, one of which was singled out
by the national Council of Writing Program Administrators as exceptional.
―The Vertical Writing Curriculum,‖ 9
Michelle Eble—As Director of Undergraduate Studies in the Department of English, Curriculum Liaison to the
UCC (2008-present) and as an undergraduate advisor (2005-present), I have been responsible for helping English
department faculty revise and develop WI course proposals, reviewing senior portfolios for assessment, revising
student learning outcomes for the BA in English, and communicating with faculty in English about the WI
models. My research and teaching have focused on grant writing, medical writing, and writing in professional
contexts. I believe that the proposed QEP will provide productive opportunities to improve writing instruction and
in turn, student writing.
Wendy Sharer—As Director of Composition for the past four years, and Associate Director of Composition for
five years before that, I am very familiar with the strengths and weaknesses of the current Writing Foundations
curriculum. Additionally, I have four years of experience designing and implementing assessments for those
courses and am currently working with the English Department‘s Composition Committee this academic year to
design and implement a portfolio-based assessment in English 1100 and 1200. I am very excited about the
opportunities that might be provided by the QEP: the institutional and financial support it entails would present a
wonderful opportunity for ECU to undertake and succeed in significant, and much needed, curricular revision.
Kerri Bright Flinchbaugh—As Assistant Director of the University Writing Program, ECU Health Sciences
Writing Consultant, Medical Writing Specialist for the Brody School of Medicine, and a former instructor in our
English Education program, I have a unique perspective about writing at ECU. In my assistant director position, I
direct the WAC Academy working with faculty on their teaching of writing, provide research on our WAC
program, implement programmatic assessment, and participate in the WAC Committee. On the health sciences
and medical campuses, I consult with both students and faculty on writing in their disciplines, working to improve
their skills. I see how the QEP will provide more opportunities for faculty development in writing, and I am
excited by the possibilities the portfolio-based writing assessment will provide across the disciplines.
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―The Vertical Writing Curriculum,‖ 12
Appendix 1: Departmental Outcomes for English 1100 and 1200
English 1100 will promote your facility with critical reading and writing by helping you to do the following:
Discover significant questions to explore and address via writing
Explore the many different purposes of writing, including writing to reflect, analyze, explain, and persuade
Practice drafting and revising
Increase your awareness of organizational strategies and your ability to apply them
Become attentive to how audience and purpose affect content, tone, and style
Incorporate sufficient and appropriate details and examples both from your experiences and from secondary research
Express your ideas with clarity and with effective syntax and punctuation
Gain competence in using computer technology in the writing process
Schedule and meet deadlines
English 1200 builds on your understanding of rhetoric and writing processes through an exploration of research-based writing. In this course
you will develop your abilities to
Formulate significant research questions
Craft a strong research proposal
Establish work plans and timelines
Locate and evaluate a variety of sources, including field-based, print, and electronic sources
Apply research and use writing to achieve a variety of purposes
Convey the results of your research to a variety of audiences
Organize source materials
Integrate outside source materials—field-based, print, and electronic—into your writing
Cite sources accurately and responsibly in order to avoid plagiarism
Identify and explain writing strategies used in your own work as well as in the work of experienced writers
―The Vertical Writing Curriculum,‖ 13
APPENDIX 2: English 1100 Portfolio Rubric & Cover Letter Rubric
English 1100 Portfolio Rubric
Invention Purpose & Audience Development
& Support
Organization Editing
4
Excellent
The documents
demonstrate the writer‘s
ability engage topics and
questions critically and
fully.
The documents consistently
demonstrate a keen
awareness of audience and
purpose.
The documents
consistently and effectively
integrate appropriate and
relevant supporting details
and evidence.
The documents
consistently display
effective structure at both
the global (the document as
a whole) and local (within
paragraphs) levels
The documents
consistently display careful
proofreading and are
largely free of surface-
level errors.
3
Good
The documents
demonstrate the writer‘s
ability to engage topics and
questions thoughtfully with
occasional lapses.
The documents demonstrate
an awareness of audience and
purpose, with only occasional
lapses.
The documents are
generally successful in
integrating sufficient and
appropriate details and
evidence, with only
occasional lapses.
The documents generally
display effective structure
at both the global and local
levels, with only
occasional lapses.
The documents reflect the
proofreading efforts of the
writer and include only
occasional surface-level
errors.
2
Adequate
The documents
demonstrate the writer‘s
ability to engage topics and
questions, but in limited
ways.
The documents demonstrate
an uneven awareness of
audience & purpose.
The documents provide
supporting details and
evidence, but do so
inconsistently and/or with
uneven integration.
The documents
demonstrate an uneven
awareness of
organizational strategies at
the global and local levels.
The documents evidence
some proofreading and
editing, but several
surface-level errors remain.
1
Poor
The documents fail to
demonstrate a level of
engagement with topics
and questions that is
adequate for college-level
work.
The documents largely fail to
demonstrate an awareness of
audience & purpose.
The documents are
substantially lacking in
supporting detail and
evidence.
The documents in the
portfolio largely fail to
display effective structure
at the global and/or the
local levels.
The documents reflect
minimal or ineffective
proofreading and editing
strategies. Numerous
surface-level errors remain.
English 1100 and 1200 Portfolio Cover Letter Rubric
4
Excellent
The cover letter clearly demonstrates the writer‘s ability to identify and explain the writing strategies (i.e., argument, organization, evidence,
style, tone, etc.) used in the documents included in the portfolio.
3
Good
The cover letter demonstrates the writer‘s ability to identify and explain the writing strategies used in the documents included in the portfolio,
with only occasional areas that are confusing or incomplete.
2
Adequate
The cover letter demonstrates that the writer is sometimes able to identify and/or explain the writing strategies used in the documents included in
the portfolio, but there are several areas that are confusing or incomplete.
1
Poor
The cover letter largely fails to demonstrate an ability to identify and explain the writing strategies the writer has made in the documents included
in the portfolio.
―The Vertical Writing Curriculum,‖ 14
APPENDIX 3: English 1200 Portfolio Rubric
Inquiry Purpose & Audience Source Selection
& Support
Organization Integration &
Citation of Sources
Editing
4
Excellent
The documents
demonstrate the
writer‘s ability to
identify and fully
engage significant
research questions.
The documents
consistently
demonstrate a keen
awareness of audience
and purpose.
The documents
consistently use
credible sources to
fully support the points
the writer makes.
The documents
consistently display
effective structure at
both the global (the
document as a whole)
and local (within
paragraphs) levels.
The documents reflect
the writer‘s ability to
smoothly integrate
source material and to
cite sources accurately
in order to avoid
plagiarism.
The documents
consistently display
careful proofreading
and are largely free of
surface-level errors.
3
Good
The documents
demonstrate the
writer‘s ability to
engage meaningful
research questions
thoughtfully but with
occasional lapses.
The documents
demonstrate an
awareness of audience
and purpose, with only
occasional lapses.
The documents use
credible sources to
support the points the
writer makes, with
only occasional lapses.
The documents
generally display
effective structure at
both the global and
local levels, with only
occasional lapses.
The documents reflect
the writer‘s ability to
integrate outside
source materials and to
cite sources accurately
in order to avoid
plagiarism, with only
occasional lapses.
The documents reflect
the proofreading
efforts of the writer
and include only
occasional surface-
level errors.
2
Adequate
The documents
demonstrate the
writer‘s ability to
engage research
questions, but in
limited ways.
The documents in the
portfolio demonstrate
an uneven awareness
of audience & purpose.
The documents use
credible sources of
research to support the
points the writer
makes, but do so
inconsistently.
The documents
demonstrate an uneven
awareness of
organizational
strategies at both the
global and local levels.
The documents reflect
an adequate, but
inconsistent, ability to
integrate source
material and to cite
sources.
The documents
evidence some
proofreading and
editing, but several
surface-level errors
remain.
1
Poor
The documents fail to
demonstrate a level of
engagement with
research questions that
is adequate for college-
level work.
The documents largely
fail to demonstrate an
awareness of audience
& purpose.
The documents largely
do not use credible
sources to support the
points the writer is
trying to make.
The documents largely
fail to display effective
structure at the global
and/or the local levels.
The documents include
numerous problems
with citation of sources
and/or fail to integrate
source material
effectively.
The documents reflect
minimal or ineffective
proofreading and
editing strategies.
Numerous surface-
level errors remain.
―The Vertical Writing Curriculum,‖ 15
APPENDIX 4: ENGL 1100 & 1200 Curriculum Update - Joyner Library Suggestions
Class Curriculum Comments Department
ENGL 1100 Finding Books and Articles in OneSearch
Evaluating Sources: o Information Cycle. Ex. Scholarly Books
are usually published 1+ years after an event
o Identifying parts of a book/journal to cite. Ex. Finding volume & issue numbers on the physical article
o Identifying parts of a citation. Ex. Looking at a citation and figuring which part is the journal title v. article title
Library 101: Introduction to Research Tutorial (http://libguides.ecu.edu/library101)
OneSearch is a new tool that searches books, scholarly journals, newspaper articles, e-books, dissertations, conference proceedings, and numerous academic databases in one search
During instruction & reference interactions, it’s apparent that freshman and upper-level students have a hard time evaluating the types of information found in a book versus a journal article
The purpose of Library 101 is to teach students basic research skills needed to succeed in college. As a result of the Library 101 tutorial, students will master the following skills: Getting Help, Navigating the Library's Website, Evaluating Sources (Books, Journals & Webpages), Searching for Articles and Books, Avoiding Plagiarism, and Citing Sources
Reference
ENGL
1200: Finding Articles in Discipline Databases
Identifying Scholarly, Professional/Trade, & Popular Journals
Primary v. Secondary Resources
Introduction to resources in majors/disciplines
Students in upper-level classes have a hard time identifying and locating scholarly, professional/trade, and popular journal articles
The definition of primary and secondary resources are different in the Humanities, Social Sciences, and Sciences
Reference
ENG 1200 History of Careers/Professions in North Carolina and around the world through Artifact Research
ECU Motto/Purpose: Service to the region
ECU Strategic Goal: ECU will prepare our students to compete and succeed in a global economy
Advanced research techniques in a smaller setting
Introduction to and interaction with Primary Resources
Putting service learning into context
NC
Collection
& Special
Collections
Amy Gustavson, Coordinator of Instructional Services, J.Y. Joyner Library, [email protected] Matt Reynolds, North Carolina Collections Public Services Librarian, J.Y. Joyner Library, [email protected] October 20, 2010