ABSTRACT

This book presents a model of Practitioner Inquiry (PI) as a systematic form of empirical research and provides a rationale for its suitability within a writing center context. Exploring the potential of writing centers as pedagogical sites that support research, the book offers an accessible model that guides both research and practice for writing center practitioners, while offering flexibility to account for their distinct contexts of practice.

Responding to the increasing call in the field to produce empirical “RAD” (replicable, aggregable, data-driven) research, the author explores Practitioner Inquiry through explication of methodology and methods, a revisitation of collaboration to guide both practice and research, and examples of application of the model. Nordstrom grounds this research and scholarship in Hawaiʻi’s context and explores Indigenous concepts and approaches to inform an ethical collaborative practice.

Offering significant contributions to empirical research in the fields of writing center studies, composition, and education, this book will be of great relevance to writing center practitioners, anyone conducting empirical research, and researchers working in tutor professionalization, collaboration, translingual literacy practices, and researchmethodologies.

chapter |24 pages

Introduction

Practitioner Inquiry and Empirical Research in the Writing Center

chapter 2|20 pages

Practitioner Inquiry

A Model for Research and Practice in the Writing Center

chapter 4|21 pages

Translingual Practices vs. Academic Discourse

Writing Center Consultants Weigh in on Supporting Writers’ Multiliteracy Repertoires

chapter |4 pages

Epilogue

A Practitioner’s Final Thoughts