Leanne Zalewski
After receiving my teaching certificate in TESOL (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages), and teaching beginning, intermediate, and advanced ESL classes, I entered the Ph.D. program in art history at the Graduate Center. I continued teaching ESL on and off up until Fall 2001. I have recently completed my coursework at the Graduate Center and will begin writing my dissertation in the field of late nineteenth-century European academic painting.
Currently, I am a Writing Fellow in the Department of Art at Hunter College working primarily with Prof. Ülkü Bates and the TAs and students of the Introduction to Art History course. For the TAs, I make suggestions for ungraded writing-to-learn assignments, create handouts, and streamline paper assignments. Periodically, I sit in on discussion sections to address issues specific to a class. For the students, I lead various writing workshops that coincide with the paper assignments and exams given in the course. In addition, I hold regular office hours for students and tutor on a one-on-one basis, focusing on the content and organization of the students' papers. During the Fall 2002 semester, I also tutored students in Prof. Bates' Chinese and Japanese Art course. For Prof. Jane Roos' course on Realism, Impressionism and Post-Impressionism, I worked with the students on a tutoring basis, and in the Spring semester (2003), I work with the students on a draft process. In this way, the writing process was expanded over a period of three weeks, giving the students a chance to improve their papers before receiving final grades.
Involvement in the Writing Across the Curriculum movement is a win-win-win-win situation. CUNY wins because it is getting a valuable service in return for its fellowship dollars; the students win because fellows are able to assist them with their writing and learning; the teachers win because fellows are working with them side-by-side to develop ways to help their students grasp material; and the CUNY Writing Fellow wins, because he or she is not only receiving valuable financial support, but is also focusing on pedagogy, which, in turn, will improve the CWF's future teaching. If it weren't for this program, for example, I wouldn't be reading John Bean and Peter Elbow. I can't wait to implement some of my own suggestions!