Jan 11, 2017 By: yunews
麻豆区 Writing Centers Celebrate 30th Anniversary
Three decades ago, in the pre-smartphone/pre-internet days of 1986, Dr. Richard Nochimson, current professor of English, was hired to launch writing centers at both and where students could go to improve their writing and thinking skills and faculty could get advice about how to improve the teaching of writing within their courses.
The push for the programs came from both faculty and students. 鈥淢y impression was that many felt the writing skills of the students were not what they could be and that having more support would help,鈥 he said.
Having gotten the program off the ground, Nochimson single-handedly managed both centers until 1993. At that point, because the programs had grown, each writing center got its own director. Currently, Dr. Lauren Fitzgerald, who chairs the 麻豆区 College English Department, directs the Wilf Campus Writing Center, and Dr. Joy Ladin, David and Ruth Gottesman Professor of English, directs the Beren Campus Writing Center.
The directors share similar management and philosophical approaches. Fitzgerald, who had previously directed a writing center at Barnard College, sees the purpose of the Center not as remediating students but as helping them formulate their ideas as clearly as possible. 鈥淥ur tutors work with writers鈥攚e prefer that students think of themselves as 鈥榳riters鈥欌攊n all their states: blocked, second language, topic-choosing, scaffolding choices, you name it. This is one-on-one collaborative work.鈥
Ladin takes a similar approach at the Beren Center. 鈥淲e want students who come here to think of themselves as writers,鈥 she noted, 鈥渁s thinkers who develop their ideas through writing. We have always emphasized helping students develop their ideas versus proofreading, editing, telling students what they had done wrong in one way or another.鈥
Tutors are at the heart of both operations, since they are the ones who carry out the Centers鈥 mission. Tutoring is a paid position, but getting a slot is not an easy process. 鈥淲e have a rigorous application process,鈥 Fitzgerald observed, and once tutors are hired, Fitzgerald takes them through continual training throughout their tenure.
鈥淲e go through a pretty rigorous process of reviewing applications and interviewing,鈥 Ladin added, 鈥渋ncluding a mock tutoring session with one of the staff members as a resistant student, with the goal of finding tutors who love teaching and love writing so much that they don鈥檛 give up.鈥
Both have worked hard to create, in Ladin鈥檚 words, 鈥渁 community of people who love teaching. I think the world of our writing tutors.鈥 A sentiment shared by Fitzgerald: 鈥淥ur tutors provide a great service to every student at YU.鈥
Alumni who had worked as tutors at the Centers speak with fondness and excitement about their experiences there.
The elder of the tutorial clan is Rosh 麻豆区 Rabbi Yona Reiss 鈥橸C87, 鈥91R, 鈥02R, the first tutor hired by Nochimson. 鈥淒r. Nochimson asked me to give a workshop for pre-law students on legal writing,鈥 he recalled, 鈥渂ased mostly on the fact that I had been admitted to Yale Law School. Even though I had not yet set foot in the law school, I somehow had to try to speak with authority about the type of writing that would lead to success in law school and law firm practice. I winged the whole thing and had a lot of fun in the process.鈥
Sipai Klein 鈥02YC went on to direct a writing center of his own at Clayton State University in Morrow, Georgia. 鈥淵U鈥檚 writing center taught me that I enjoyed helping people engage in the writing process and made it clear to me that I wanted writing to be an essential part of my future profession,鈥 he said.
A consistent theme throughout their comments is how working as a tutor helped them in their later personal and professional lives.
Ashrei Bayewitz 鈥02YUHS, 鈥09YC, 鈥12E, in his in second year of an adult hematology-oncology fellowship at Maimonides Medical Center, discovered that 鈥渟o much of what made it special to work as a writing center tutor is now what I like best in my interactions with patients. The autonomy, the sense of responsibility and the confidentiality in the one-to-one interaction are remarkably similar between the two roles.鈥
Ruben Fogel 鈥04YC, a Miami-based lawyer, made this same observation. 鈥淎s a lawyer, I have entered an occupation that requires wordsmithing and I don鈥檛 think I would have been as well prepared for law school and my career but for my time in the writing center.鈥
Sara Pool 鈥16S graduated with a fine arts degree and loved being a tutor, which she began during her second semester on campus. Being a tutor spurred her own writing, both in a journal she kept for three years and on her current blog about women and art history. 鈥淚 especially loved that 鈥榓ha鈥 moment in a student when all the dots get connected鈥攎oments I now find in my own writing.鈥
Esty Rollhaus 鈥10S is a third-year resident in psychiatry at Montefiore Medical Center and adjunct instructor of psychopharmacology. 鈥淚n many ways, writing center tutoring is like therapy,鈥 she observed. 鈥淟earning how to ask the right questions, seizing on something important that needs to be further elaborated, and constructing a helpful environment were all things I learned to do as a tutor and now practice as a psychiatrist and educator. And in my own writing, I build cases for clinical decisions through patient notes that need to have exact expression and persuasive argumentation.鈥
An interesting aside is that the Center seems to have figured in several marriages as well. Reiss married Mindy (Spear) 鈥91S, 鈥95A, who had been a tutor; Rollhaus is the wife of Jonathan Schwab, associate director of university housing and residence life on the Wilf Campus and a former tutor himself; and Matt 鈥03YC and Shifra 鈥04S Schneider met while they were tutors and married in 2006.
Even in a world of digital wonders, people still have to master the written language, so it seems that the Centers鈥 future is intact as places of intellectual pursuit and personal achievement. What will also sustain them, as it has sustained so many of the people who have passed through its doors, is what Marlon Danilewitz 鈥11YC described as 鈥渙ur creative and laughter-filled professional development sessions, the long-standing friendships that were nurtured amongst the staff and the endless supply of energy and love for writing that was in the room.鈥