UWR Courses
DDE UWR Courses
UWR Graduation Checksheet
UWR for Students
UWR for Faculty and Advisors
UWR Cover Sheet (RTF)
UWR Cover Sheet Samples
UWR Statement
UWR Sample Syllabi
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EOU graduates must complete the University Writing Requirement
Eastern Oregon University is strongly committed to the view
that writing
aids in learning and that writing skills are key to professional
success.
The University Writing Requirement (UWR) requires that students receive
attention to writing throughout their studies and that students
demonstrate
their mastery of discipline-specific writing. To this end, all students
entering in Fall 2004 must complete the following:
- First-year writing courses required by placement,
- One lower-division UWR writing-intensive course identified
by each
major,
and
- Two upper-division UWR writing-intensive courses as
identified by each
major.
The means for satisfying this requirement are described in each major.
Outcomes for lower-division UWR writing-intensive courses:
- Students will produce at least 3,000 words (including
drafts, in-class
writing, informal papers, and polished papers); 1,000 words of this
total
should be in polished papers which students have revised after
receiving
feedback and criticism.
- Students will be introduced to the discourse forms
appropriate to the
discipline
the course represents.
- Students will write at least one paper integrating
information from at
least one source, employing the appropriate documentation style for the
discipline represented by the course.
- Students will draft, revise, and edit their formal written
work.
- Students will seek assistance from a Writing Tutor in the
Writing Lab
when
needed and when referred by the instructor.
Outcomes for upper-division UWR writing-intensive courses:
- Students will produce at least 5,000 words (including
drafts, in-class
writing, informal papers, and polished papers); 2,000 words of this
total
should be in polished papers which students have revised after
receiving
feedback and criticism.
- Students will practice the forms of writing and reflect
upon the nature
of the writing used by graduates and professionals in the discipline
the
course represents.
- Students will write at least one paper integrating
information from
more
than one source, employing the appropriate documentation style for the
discipline represented by the course.
- Students will draft, revise, and edit their formal written
work.
- Students will seek assistance from a Writing Tutor in the
Writing Lab
when
needed and when referred by the instructor.
Students must complete all UWR writing-intensive courses with a C- or
better,
and UWR writing-intensive courses must allocate at least 30% of the
overall
grade to formal writing assignments, with at least 25% of the overall
grade
based on evaluation of individually written papers that have been
revised
after feedback.
UWR writing-intensive courses will address punctuation,
grammar, and
disciplinary documentation style, but they are primarily intended to be
discipline courses which use writing tasks to help students learn the
material
and learn how to write effectively in the discipline.
Students admitted and matriculated prior to Fall 2004 may
choose the Writing Proficiency Examination. See the EOU Catalog for further
information.
Approved by EOU Assembly May 4, 2004
for implementation Fall 2004
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