Establishing a Health Sciences writing centre in the changing landscape of South African Higher Education

This article describes, analyses, and reflects on the conceptualisation and establishment of a Writing Lab at a South African university’s Faculty of Health Sciences. Drawing on the theoretical framework of New Literacy Studies, the academic literacies approach, and South African writing centre scho...

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Main Authors: Natashia Muna, Taahira Goolam Hoosen, Karis Moxley, Ermien van Pletzen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Western Cape 2019-06-01
Series:Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning
Online Access:http://cristal.ac.za/index.php/cristal/article/view/165
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spelling doaj-09f6c9bc8c8548bf8f81b970d2da0bb82020-11-25T02:08:28ZengUniversity of the Western CapeCritical Studies in Teaching and Learning2310-71032019-06-0171194110.14426/cristal.v7i1.165165Establishing a Health Sciences writing centre in the changing landscape of South African Higher EducationNatashia Muna0Taahira Goolam Hoosen1Karis Moxley2Ermien van Pletzen3University of Cape TownUniversity of Cape TownStellenbosch UniversityUniversity of Cape TownThis article describes, analyses, and reflects on the conceptualisation and establishment of a Writing Lab at a South African university’s Faculty of Health Sciences. Drawing on the theoretical framework of New Literacy Studies, the academic literacies approach, and South African writing centre scholarship, the analysis revealed that the conceptualisation of the Writing Lab was primarily informed by the academic socialisation model but has since shifted to encompass a more transformative ideology; opening spaces where students’ own knowledges and literacies practices could contribute to new forms of thinking and representation in the academy. We argue that the shift was facilitated by collaboration with disciplinary lecturers, the faculty’s Primary Health Care ethos, and the Writing Lab’s engagement with a large postgraduate population, leading to the Writing Lab’s participation in new forms of knowledge-building that could contribute to the creation of decolonised spaces and shifts in institutional culture.http://cristal.ac.za/index.php/cristal/article/view/165
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Natashia Muna
Taahira Goolam Hoosen
Karis Moxley
Ermien van Pletzen
spellingShingle Natashia Muna
Taahira Goolam Hoosen
Karis Moxley
Ermien van Pletzen
Establishing a Health Sciences writing centre in the changing landscape of South African Higher Education
Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning
author_facet Natashia Muna
Taahira Goolam Hoosen
Karis Moxley
Ermien van Pletzen
author_sort Natashia Muna
title Establishing a Health Sciences writing centre in the changing landscape of South African Higher Education
title_short Establishing a Health Sciences writing centre in the changing landscape of South African Higher Education
title_full Establishing a Health Sciences writing centre in the changing landscape of South African Higher Education
title_fullStr Establishing a Health Sciences writing centre in the changing landscape of South African Higher Education
title_full_unstemmed Establishing a Health Sciences writing centre in the changing landscape of South African Higher Education
title_sort establishing a health sciences writing centre in the changing landscape of south african higher education
publisher University of the Western Cape
series Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning
issn 2310-7103
publishDate 2019-06-01
description This article describes, analyses, and reflects on the conceptualisation and establishment of a Writing Lab at a South African university’s Faculty of Health Sciences. Drawing on the theoretical framework of New Literacy Studies, the academic literacies approach, and South African writing centre scholarship, the analysis revealed that the conceptualisation of the Writing Lab was primarily informed by the academic socialisation model but has since shifted to encompass a more transformative ideology; opening spaces where students’ own knowledges and literacies practices could contribute to new forms of thinking and representation in the academy. We argue that the shift was facilitated by collaboration with disciplinary lecturers, the faculty’s Primary Health Care ethos, and the Writing Lab’s engagement with a large postgraduate population, leading to the Writing Lab’s participation in new forms of knowledge-building that could contribute to the creation of decolonised spaces and shifts in institutional culture.
url http://cristal.ac.za/index.php/cristal/article/view/165
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