Abstract

Undergraduate and graduate students come to the writing center for consultations with peer tutors in order to improve their communication skills. During thirteen peer tutoring sessions (over the course of one semester) it became clear that these students were meeting with the tutors, that I supervised, for more than just help with their writing. I observed six male and seven female students that needed help. There were five international students and they were considered ESL-English as a Second Language students. Interestingly, all the students indicated a high level of frustration (by a perceived lack of caring on the part of their Professors) who made comments on their assignments. They came to the Center, hurt and confused, and in need of some deciphering about just what their Professors wanted from them. The students were uncomfortable with approaching their Professors to discuss the papers. The Professors, were truly overwhelmed with department and research obligations making it hard to meet with students repeatedly. It became clear that the writing center tutor needed to fill this role by employing a more caring tutoring approach.

Highlights

  • A new phenomena in peer tutoring is the turn toward an examination of the role of care giving during peer tutoring sessions

  • I posit that using the caring tutoring approach in a cozy writing center leads to closer tutor-tutee inter-personal relationships

  • If a tutee cries during the session such emotions need to be discussed in caring ways in order to develop the tutor-tutee’s inter-personal relationship

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Summary

Introduction

A new phenomena in peer tutoring is the turn toward an examination of the role of care giving during peer tutoring sessions. Peer tutors can choose to be caring as they work in cozy “spots where talk about writing can happen” (McKinney, 2005). I posit that using the caring tutoring approach in a cozy writing center leads to closer tutor-tutee inter-personal relationships. Care that peer tutors show tutees often includes talking about writing anxiety in addition to emotional problems. The fact that writing centers deal with students on a one-on-one basis allows it to employ a caring tutoring approach. A caring tutoring approach works less well in the formal classroom due to its time constraints, resources, and sheer number of students

Why We Need to Train Writing Center Personnel to Employ the Caring Approach
An Example of this Caring Approach
Why caring?
Tutor-Tutee Relationships
Raising Self-Esteem Levels
Quality of the Relationships Formed
Positive Regard
Actualizing Theory
Conclusions
Full Text
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