GEW 101B Course Content
Activities & Assignments
While the specific activities and writing projects will vary based on instructor,
all GEW students will:
- Engage in frequent, low-stakes writing (e.g., weekly discussion forums or blogs, regular
reflections on the writing process).
- Practice writing for specific audiences and purposes.
- Participate in a multi-draft writing process that requires substantial revision in
response to peer and instructor feedback.
- Experience two Writing Center 鈥渆ncounters鈥 during the semester, such as a tutoring
session, a workshop/webinar, or an info session.
- Utilize 大发鈥檚 library to locate academic/scholarly sources.
- Produce an extended inquiry project equivalent to an academic research article. This
project may take the shape of one long project that is drafted in stages (i.e., a
15-18 page academic article), or it may include 2-3 smaller projects (i.e., a synthesis
or non-academic-audience project + a 9-11 page academic article, or a literacy narrative
+ a multimodal project + 8-10 page academic article).
- Instructors are encouraged to integrate multimodal composition in their courses.
Assigned Readings
Assigned readings will vary based on instructor, but all GEW students will engage
with 鈥渋nstructional texts鈥 and 鈥渕entor texts.鈥
Instructional texts introduce students to the writing process, to writing as a rhetorical act, and to
academic research writing. These texts are written by Composition Studies scholars
and grounded in current Composition Studies theory.
Mentor texts (which might be non-fiction essays, podcasts, videos, works of fiction, etc) create
opportunities for students to analyze how other writers employ rhetorical strategies,
as well as how writing produces social constructions and power relations. Analyzing
mentor texts helps students become more aware of the ways their own writing is socially
situated.