Students at all levels nationwide are completing their final essays and papers at home due to COVID-19 school closures. Forty-five states have ceased face-to-face instruction for the remainder of the school year, affecting more than 47 million K-12 students, according to Education Week.
The Purdue University Online Writing Lab (OWL) is a free resource for writing tips and assignments, research and citation tutorials, and teacher and tutor materials. The site received 21.4 million pageviews in April, said Harry Denny, an associate professor of English in the College of Liberal Arts and director of the OWL. The lab’s internet-based collection of resources has grown out of face-to-face and small group support for writers that Purdue has offered students, faculty, and staff for over 45 years.
“There’s volumes of information, whether it’s K-12 or college-level,” Denny said.
The OWL’s most popular feature is its research and citation pages, which cover writing and citing references in American Psychological Association, Modern Language Association or Chicago styles, Denny said. Instructions on how to proofread and how to write in different genres, such as argumentative or persuasive essays, also are popular.
Denny said these features also could be useful to parents and students completing final essays and writing assignments at home:
- Common writing assignments, including book reports, bibliographies and research papers.
- Tips on subject-specific writing, including writing for social science, engineering and health care.
- OWL YouTube channel, which includes lessons on grammar, rhetoric, and professional and technical writing.
- General writing exercises, including sentence-level writing, grammar and editing.
- Tips on how to navigate the site.
- Online tutoring for Purdue students, faculty and staff.
Denny also provided these tips for parents who want to encourage creative and critical writing at home:
- Free write: “It could be really helpful and therapeutic for a lot of people to free write, such as taking notes or keeping a journal. It’s not about paragraphing and sentence-level correctness, but it’s about getting people to vent their thoughts and their stresses. I encourage my students to pull out their phones and tablets and just take notes. Writing can be really helpful, especially if they don’t fear anyone is going to judge or correct them.”
- Explore the internet: “Explore, write and think critically about different sites and sources that they’re finding on the internet or at home. That’s another avenue through which parents and young people can keep engaged with writing that they’re doing.”
- Create a blog: “Develop a space where they can post entries, photographs, poetry or any kind of writing about what they’re experiencing. But also use it as a space to start thinking about what their writing on the internet and social media says about them. It’s another way to cultivate your own voice. They can be more thoughtful and more critical about self-presentation, but also realize the web is this great space to be creative.”
About Purdue University
Purdue University is a top public research institution developing practical solutions to today’s toughest challenges. Ranked the No. 6 Most Innovative University in the United States by U.S. News & World Report, Purdue delivers world-changing research and out-of-this-world discovery. Committed to hands-on and online, real-world learning, Purdue offers a transformative education to all. Committed to affordability and accessibility, Purdue has frozen tuition and most fees at 2012-13 levels, enabling more students than ever to graduate debt-free. See how Purdue never stops in the persistent pursuit of the next giant leap at purdue.edu.
Writer: Joseph Paul
Source: Harry Denny
Writer: Joseph Paul
Source: Harry Denny
No comments:
Post a Comment