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WRITING ACROSS THE CURRICULUM
Writing Across the Curriculum (WAC) at Wright State University is a comprehensive program extending writing
throughout each student's undergraduate career. The Writing Across the Curriculum program consists of two parts—Writing in General Education and Writing in the Major—and serves the following purposes:
- To improve students' writing proficiency—their ability to develop ideas and transmit information for an
appropriate audience in an organized, coherent fashion while writing with appropriate style and correct
grammar, usage, punctuation and spelling.
- To encourage students to use writing as a learning tool to explore and structure ideas, to articulate thoughts
and questions, and to discover what they know and do not know, thereby empowering students to use writing
as a tool of discovery, self-discipline, and thought.
- To demonstrate for students the ways in which writing is integral to all disciplines, essential to the learning
and conveying of knowledge in all fields.
Part I: WRITING IN GENERAL EDUCATION
- All undergraduate students who first enroll at the University Fall Quarter
1996 or thereafter must complete a minimum of four writing intensive (WI) general
education courses, or allowable substitutions, in addition to the two
required courses in freshman composition; transfer students will complete the
WAC/GE requirement in proportion to the amount of the general education program
they have completed when they enter the
University (see Academic Standards and Requirements
section of the Undergraduate Catalog).
- Each WI section of a GE course will include writing assignments totaling
approximately 1500 words, which will be evaluated for content, form, style,
correctness, and overall writing proficiency and give students the
opportunity for revision and improvement. Assignments may take many forms and
include a mix of formal writing (e.g., a number of short papers evaluated in
both draft and final form, a long assignment broken into
smaller parts, thus allowing for multiple drafts, feedback, and revisions,) and
informal writing (e.g., journals, logs, short responses to lectures, essay
examinations). All the writing will count as part of students'
performance in the course.
- WI sections are offered in required GE substitution courses, as well as
in standard GE courses. In instances where the required substitutions are a
sequence of two or three courses, only one of the courses in the
sequence may be writing intensive.
- Students must pass the "writing intensive" portion of a GE course in order
to fulfill the university requirement for the program. Grading for the WI portion
of a course is pass/no entry.
Students are encouraged to complete all four Writing Intensive GE courses (as
well as English 101 and 102) or to have demonstrated writing proficiency as
described in #5 below by the time they have attained junior
status.
- Students who do not successfully complete the WI portion of four GE courses (excluding English 101 and
102) may satisfy the requirements for writing proficiency in GE in any one of the following three ways:
- pass the WI portion of at least two GE courses and earn a grade of C or better in an approved
advanced writing course.
- pass the WI portion of at least two GE courses and prepare an acceptable portfolio that includes
writing on demand.
- earn a grade of C or better in an approved advanced writing course and prepare an acceptable
portfolio that includes writing on demand.
The combination of four writing intensive courses in GE and two writing intensive courses in the major means that the
Writing Across the Curriculum Program at WSU requires each undergraduate student to complete a minimum of six
writing intensive courses in addition to their required freshman composition courses.
*pass = the equivalent of a C grade or better
NOTE: GE writing intensive courses will be
available within a number of areas, including (but not limited to) the following:
Area II (all Non-Western World classes); Area III (SOC 200, WMS 200;
EC 290, and some sections of EC 200); Area IV (all Great Books
classes); Area V (some classes); Area VI (all classes). Students completing the
1987 General Education program may count writing intensive courses in the 2003
GE program toward fulfilling their writing intensive requirements.
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