Teaching with Writing Blog


Posted by Daniel Emery // // 1

Faculty members and instructors have learned that moving from face-to-face classes to online and hybrid instruction requires careful consideration of how we communicate information and expectations to our students. Meeting students’ needs and building community requires that we present materials in ways that are clear, concrete, and easy to navigate. 


Posted by Daniel Emery // // 0

Just like a journey, every course begins with a plan and a destination in mind. However, experienced instructors (and navigators) know that circumstances, opportunities, and unforeseen challenges often produce small changes that can lead to significant consequences. One slight shift in a deadline for a writing assignment or one extended conversation and discussion can have repercussions down the road.


Posted by Daniel Emery // // 0

Previous tips and workshops have addressed the importance of formative feedback for student writers, those comments aimed toward generating revision when a student still has time to revise their work. In this tip, we will focus on two types of informal writing that can help students turn formative feedback into effective revision. Revision plans are beneficial for students who have less experience revising the kind of writing they have produced, while revision memos are more useful for more experienced writers.


Posted by Daniel Emery // // 2

Circumstances have made many of us quick experts on preparing and delivering online and hybrid courses, but the semester’s start gives us a chance to retool and refine our practices. It can help to take a step back from the tools, technologies, and platforms for delivering course content online to consider the foundational learning goals for your course. This tip will provide suggestions for reviewing course and learning goals and thinking of ways that writing practice can support and reinforce those expectations.


Posted by Matthew Luskey // // 0

At the end of the semester, especially one as trying as this, it may take all we have to just get through the next two weeks. Students are remotely navigating their labyrinths of final projects and exams, and instructors and TAs are working through their backlog of grading. It’s probably not a good time to implement a new strategy for teaching with writing. And yet, while “Old Time is still a-flying,” it is useful to think about gathering work from this semester to support your teaching in the spring.


Posted by Matthew Luskey // // 0

As we enter the final weeks of the semester and approach the Thanksgiving Break, after which all classes at the University of Minnesota will be fully remote, the need to maintain supportive communication and instructional presence is vital. For many students, end-of-the-term, often high-stakes writing assignments may generate questions and concerns that are intensified in a remote learning environment and differences in time zones.


Posted by Matthew Luskey // // 3

Educational research strongly underscores the interdependence of reading and writing and the social nature of literacy.

Hanging wood sign with word spelling welcome

Posted by Matthew Luskey // // 1

Despite so much uncertainty, here’s what we do know about this next semester: the university will begin and end classes remotely, and technology will factor heavily into how courses are organized and taught. For those courses that may eventually feature onsite instruction, measures to enforce social distancing will likely alter the familiar dynamic of physical learning spaces. Now more than ever, community and engagement—essential elements for successful teaching and learning across the disciplines—will be nurtured by attending carefully to our language and our modes of communication.


Posted by Daniel Emery // // 0

Feedback on writing is critical to writing development, but how can we provide valuable feedback in an online teaching context? This tip introduces audio and video feedback as strategies for responding to writing and details easily available tools in Canvas to incorporate audio and video feedback.