ABSTRACT

While education is based on the broad assumption that what one learns here can transfer over there– across critical transitions – what do we really know about the transfer of knowledge?The question is all the more urgent at a time when there are pressures to “unbundle” higher education to target learning particular subjects and skills for occupational credentialing to the detriment of integrative education that enables students to make connections and integrate their knowledge, skills and habits of mind into a adaptable and critical stance toward the worldThis book – the fruit of two-year multi-institutional studies by forty-five researchers from twenty-eight institutions in five countries – identifies enabling practices for, and five essential principles about, writing transfer that should inform decision-making by all higher education stakeholders about how to generally promote the transfer of knowledge.This collection concisely summarizes what we know about writing transfer and explores the implications of writing transfer research for universities’ institutional decisions about writing across the curriculum requirements, general education programs, online and hybrid learning, outcomes assessment, writing-supported experiential learning, e-portfolios, first-year experiences, and other higher education initiatives. This volume makes writing transfer research accessible to administrators, faculty decision makers, and other stakeholders across the curriculum who have a vested interest in preparing students to succeed in their future writing tasks in academia, the workplace, and their civic lives, and offers a framework for addressing the tensions between competency-based education and the integration of knowledge so vital for our society.

part One|66 pages

Critical Sites of Impact

chapter 2|12 pages

Transfer and Educational Reform in the Twenty-First Century

College and Career Readiness and the Common Core Standards

chapter 4|10 pages

Writing, Transfer, and ePortfolios

A Possible Trifecta in Supporting Student Learning

chapter 5|10 pages

Writing High-Impact Practices

Developing Proactive Knowledge in Complex Contexts

chapter 7|10 pages

Telling Expectations about Academic Writing

If Not Working, What About Knotworking?

part Two|76 pages

Principles at Work: Implications for Practice Case Studies

chapter 9|10 pages

Teaching for Transfer

chapter 11|9 pages

Cueing and Adapting First-Year Writing Knowledge

Support for Transfer Into Disciplinary Writing

chapter 12|9 pages

Promoting CrossDisciplinary Transfer

A Case Study in Genre Learning

chapter 13|13 pages

“The Hardest Thing With Writing is not Getting Enough Instruction”

Helping Educators Guide Students Through Writing Challenges

chapter 14|11 pages

Coda

Writing Transfer and the Future of the Integrated University