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Article
Gender Preferences in Writing Center Appointments: The Case for a Metadata-Driven Approach
The Journal of Writing Analytics (2020)
  • Mark Pedretti, Providence College
  • Megan S Jewell, Case Western Reserve University
Abstract
Writing center studies has sought to move towards research methods that are replicable, aggregable, and data-supported (RAD) as a means to scholarly legitimacy. While a number of RAD research methods have been identified (surveys, qualitative analysis, observation, case studies, experimentation, discourse analysis, teacher research, action research, and ethnography), one important source of information has been largely overlooked: the scheduling metadata that writing centers routinely collect in the course of normal operations. The present research seeks to demonstrate the validity of metadata-driven research by interrogating an area of writing center scholarship that has been predominantly studied through theoretical or small group means: the impact of gender on writing consultations. It investigates whether the gender of the writing consultant significantly affects a student’s choice in scheduling appointments.
Publication Date
2020
DOI
10.37514/JWA-J.2020.4.1.10
Citation Information
Mark Pedretti and Megan S Jewell. "Gender Preferences in Writing Center Appointments: The Case for a Metadata-Driven Approach" The Journal of Writing Analytics Vol. 4 (2020) ISSN: 2474-7491
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/mark-pedretti/22/