Extending the Principles of Intensive Writing to Large Macroeconomics Classes |
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Authors: | Peter Docherty Harry Tse Ross Forman Jo McKenzie |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Finance and Economics , University of Technology , Sydney;2. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences and formerly in the English Language and Study Skills Assistance (ELSSA) Center , University of Technology , Sydney;3. Institute for Interactive Media and Learning (IML) , University of Technology , Sydney |
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Abstract: | The authors report on the design and implementation of a pilot program to extend the principles of intensive writing outlined by W. Lee Hansen (1998), Murray S. Simpson and Shireen E. Carroll (1999) and David Carless (2006) to large macroeconomics classes. The key aspect of this program was its collaborative nature, with staff from two specialist units joining forces with two economics instructors to provide students with significant resources and direction in a short program of writing, embedded within an intermediate macroeconomics subject at the University of Technology, Sydney (UTS). The objective was to test potential strategies and to identify points of improvement for a more intensive program of writing development at the next stage of implementation. The authors review the literature on student writing and associated assessment issues, outline the central design features of the UTS program, and take a closer look at the centerpiece of a strategy for overcoming writing problems: a series of writing workshops targeted at two related assignments within the intermediate macroeconomics course. |
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Keywords: | assessment embedded programs expectations student writing |
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