From Struggle to Strategy: Tutoring Citation
Tabitha Fisher & Monica Gingerich, Pennsylvania State University LEARNING OUTCOMES/OBJECTIVESThe intended learning outcomes of this session are that tutors are (1) able to identify trends in their own experiences with and emotional responses to tutoring students on citation, (2) identify factors that make citation difficult for writers, (3) develop an understanding of fundamental citation and style guide knowledge through a presentation and Q&A period, and (4) generate strategies for helping writers with citation in future tutorials. Citation work is an integral part of both the writing and research aspects of assignments that often requires additional support. For Writing Center Administrators (WCAs), supporting tutor development in this area effectively is best done by engaging in the methods of library and information sciences. Turning to experts in research to explore the Association of College & Research Libraries (ACRL)’s Framework for Information Literacy can enhance students’ understanding of citation work. This lesson plan is grounded in connecting the Framework with threshold concepts in the field of writing studies. In this lesson, participants primarily engage in frames three and five (“Information Has Value” and “Scholarship as Conversation”). These frames assert that information has value in a variety of contexts and circumstances and that practices in interacting with information are context-dependent, underscoring the value of appropriate documentation skills (ALA 16). Frame Five addresses the rhetorical dimension of constructing knowledge and facilitating conversation in writing through appropriate engagement with information, including documentation (ALA 20). This framework allows facilitators of the session to connect citation practice to the rhetorical threshold concepts likely familiar to writing tutors as articulated by Adler-Kassner and Wardle. Frames Three and Five pair particularly well with Concept 1 (“Writing is a Social and Rhetorical Activity”) and Concept 1.1 (“Writing is a Knowledge-Making Activity”). Tutors who can grasp implicitly or articulate explicitly these threshold concepts, in our experience, often struggle to apply these lenses to the practice of tutoring documentation. Demonstrating the connections between a research framework to these rhetorical principles will enhance tutor confidence to view citation as mutable, negotiable, constructivist praxis that creates meaning rather than a loaded formality in the composition process. By the end of the session, tutors will be able to:
MATERIALS NEEDED
IntroductionWelcome and overview the session objectives and agenda. Explain to participants that this will be a shame-free environment to discuss a challenging topic in tutoring and to generate strategies. Explain that participants will be exploring their personal experiences in tutoring citation before learning about different ways of viewing documentation as a practice in both writing center studies and library work. Explain that the session will conclude with exercises that ask participants to generate practical strategies (Slide 2).Exploring Experiences Activity (Slides 4-6): This activity asks participants to call on their prior experiences and frames the tone of the session. Below are several options for this activity. The facilitators will then bring the group back together and ask a few student groups to share what they discussed. This opening activity pushes tutors to bring into the room their honest experiences and emotional associations with tutoring citation. By creating a more open environment where tutors can be honest about their knowledge levels and approach, facilitators can dispel anxiety or dread around the training. The opening activity should also introduce some of the vocabulary that will appear throughout the session. Option 1: Small Group Discussion
Option 2: Confessions Solo Writing
Option 3: Large Group Word Association
Body of LessonThe next section will be a presentation introducing background knowledge on citations and why we use them (Slides 7-8). Participants are asked to explore the varying purposes of documentation in the classroom and in their future fields. There are pragmatic dimensions to documentation in how the audience uses the citations to navigate the writer’s research and there are rhetorical implications in how the writer establishes themselves within the scholarly conversation. In exploring these dimensions of citation, facilitators will contrast the session’s approach to typical threatening approaches to citation (avoiding violating academic integrity or “stealing” ideas; see Bloch, 2008). Facilitators will point to the Association for College & Research Libraries Information Literacy framework to ground this portion of the presentation.Next, facilitators will ask participants to brainstorm the challenges they have noticed in their experiences tutoring. The facilitator will then introduce tutors to several concepts that make citation difficult, including information literacy, technology literacy, container collapse, and vague classification of source types, helping them to categorize their brainstormed challenges (Slides 9-10). Invisible Systems Bias
Information Literacy
Tech Literacy
Container Collapse
Vague Classification of Source Types
ConclusionThe facilitator will summarize what the groups have contributed thus far, demonstrating their application to the challenges participants articulated at the start of the session. The facilitator will ask participants to respond in writing to the following questions for further training recommendations via digital or manual collection strategies (Slide 12). Participants’ responses can be collected as an “Exit Ticket” (their contribution to the conversation prior to leaving the session).
ASSESSING FOR UNDERSTANDING Both the strategies that participants produce in their groups/partners in the “Breaking Down Barriers” activity and the Exit Ticket questions require participants to demonstrate an understanding of the origin of challenging citation tutorials while pulling on prior knowledge and experience to generate solutions. The Exit Ticket requires them to apply these strategies in theory and pushes them to articulate needs for further development. If participants can successfully complete these activities, they will demonstrate knowledge about the function of documentation, regardless of style guide particulars, and begin working through solutions to larger problems that manifest in tutorials.EXTENSIONS AND ADAPTATIONS Suggestions for extending or condensing the training
RESOURCES "Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education", American Library Association, February 9, 2015. http://www.ala.org/acrl/standards/ilframework (Accessed January 2, 2024) Document ID: b910a6c4-6c8a-0d44-7dbc-a5dcbd509e3f
Adhikari, S. (2018). Beyond culture: Helping international students avoid plagiarism. Journal of International Students, 8(1), 375-388. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1134315 Adler-Kassner, l., & Waddle, E. (2015). Naming what we know: Threshold concepts of writing studies. University Press of Colorado. https://doi.org/10.1080/14790726.2017.1324881 Bloch, J. (2008). Plagiarism across cultures: Is there a difference? In C. Eisner & M. Vicinus (Eds.), Originality, imitation, and plagiarism: Teaching writing in the digital age (pp. 219-230). University of Michigan Press. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv65sxk1.22 Connaway, L. S. (2018, June 20). What is “container collapse” and why should librarians and teachers care? Next, OCLC. https://blog.oclc.org/next/what-is-container-collapse-and-why-should-librarians-and-teachers-care/ International Society for Technology in Education (2024). ISTE Standards For Students. https://iste.org/standards/students Shin, D., Shin, E. Y., Ahmad, N., & Chauhan, P. (2023). Data's impact on algorithmic bias. Computer, 56(6), 90-94. https://doi.org/10.1109/MC.2023.3262909 REFERENCES Adler-Kassner, l., & Waddle, E. (2015). Naming what we know: Threshold concepts of writing studies. University Press of Colorado. https://doi.org/10.1080/14790726.2017.1324881 Bloch, J. (2008). Plagiarism across cultures: Is there a difference? In C. Eisner & M. Vicinus (Eds.), Originality, imitation, and plagiarism: Teaching writing in the digital age (pp. 219-230). University of Michigan Press. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv65sxk1.22 American Library Association. (2015, February 9). Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education. Association of College & Research Libraries (ACRL). https://www.ala.org/acrl/standards/ilframework |