Researching the Writing Center is the first book-length treatment of the research base for academic writing tutoring. The book reviews the current state of writing center scholarship, arguing that although practitioner-researchers continue to value anecdotal and experiential evidence, they must also appreciate empirical evidence as mediating theory and practice. Readers of this revised edition will discover an evidence-based orientation to research and be able to evaluate the current scholarship on recommended writing center practice. Chapters examine the research base for current theory and practice involving the contexts of tutoring, tutoring activities, and the tutoring of specific populations. Readers will investigate the sample research question "What is a 'successful' writing consultation?" Researching the Writing Center concludes with an agenda for future questions about writing center practice that can be researched empirically. This revised edition of the text is intended for writing center professionals, researchers, graduate students in English, composition studies, and education, and peer tutors in training. It is also suitable for courses in writing center theory and practice, learning center theory and practice, composition studies, education, and learning assistance.
"In «Researching the Writing Center», Rebecca Day Babcock and Terese Thonus give writing center studies a new understanding of itself. Up to this point, writing center scholarship was largely seen as theoretical or anecdotally based, and it was this perspective that often guided practice. However, Babcock and Thonus help us see that the field has long been made up of empirical research that can better ground our decisions and actions." Lauren Fitzgerald, Professor of English; Chair of the English Department and Director of the Wilf Campus Writing Center, Yeshiva University and Melissa Ianetta, Professor of English; Andrew B. Kirkpatrick Jr. Chair of Writing, Director of Writing Centers, and Editor, «College English», University of Delaware