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The Writing Program
BEGUN IN THE 1960's, the Ball State University Writing Program has
evolved over the past four decades into arguably the core of Ball
State's
University Core Curriculum. Most students take at least two
semesters of writing at Ball State; if enrolled in the
Basic Writing program for more
writing experience, students take three courses.
In 2007, Ball State's Writing Program was recognized as one of the
best in the country when it received the
Writing Program Certificate of
Excellence by the Conference on College Composition and
Communication (CCCC).
The
writing experience for Ball State students is intimately connected to
computers. In the late 1990’s, through our
Writing, Computers, and Literacy Initiative, a part of our
commitment to developing diverse notions of literacy, the majority of
Writing Program courses were transferred into computer-enhanced
classrooms. In connection with this dedication to new technologies, we
created strong support resources for teaching and learning with
computers, such as the electronic version of the Writing Program's
handbook, Ball Point, the online component
to our Writing Center.
Now, halfway through the first decade of a new century, our
commitment to diverse notions of literacy leads us to continue our look
towards the future. Starting with the 2005-2006 academic year, the
Writing Program instituted revised course goals that were reflected in
the new master syllabuses for English 101/102,
103, 104, and
114. The Writing Program made these changes in
order to:
- Emphasize the rhetorical nature of writing and reading,
- Emphasize the importance of inquiry,
- Increase unity and coherence among courses,
- Respond to the increasing ease of, and need for, incorporating
visual elements into writing, and to
- Better serve the goals of the Undergraduate Core Curriculum
The Writing Program grounds itself in the belief that writing and
reading are reciprocal language activities and that both are rhetorical
in nature: that is, they both involve a writer who desires to affect a
reader in some way. Given these beliefs, we have crafted a two-semester
reading-writing experience that begins in the first semester with the
rhetorical nature of writing and extends that knowledge in the second
semester through a sustained focus on human inquiry. English 101/102,
103, English 104, and English 114 are taught in a systematic and
sequential manner that encourages students to develop their own unique
ways of writing and reading.
Noteworthy
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Writing Program Information
Courses
Resources
Related Links
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