History Historically, writing centers in American universities began appearing as "writing labs" in the early 20th century. Elizabeth Boquet and Stephen North point to the origins of the writing laboratory as first a method, not a place, where "the key characteristic of which appears to have been that all work was to be done during class time". This was to allow the student to compose with the teacher present, able to help with any revisions or questions the student may have. However, as class sizes and universities grew, Writing Centers began to develop as university institutions, often conceived of as an editing service for students. In response to insufficient faculty availability to meet students' needs, This remedy successfully provided help to students who were struggling with writing at the college level and providing training
Location of writing centers Writing centers may be centrally located at higher education institutions. Centers may be located within a student success center, which may offer other academic support services to students such as
study skills appointments and workshops. or Learning Development Groups. Some writing centers may be part of a writing studies department or stand-alone. Some institutions also offer an
Online Writing Lab (OWL), which generally attempts to follow the model of writing center tutoring in an online environment. These environments have been said to be a step toward a new model of writing centers, a model known as
Multiliteracy Centers. Another environment that could fall under this category is a physical space known as a
digital studio.
Writing consultants Depending on the writing center and the target population, consultants may be undergraduate peer consultants, graduate consultants, graduate peer consultants, staff consultants, or faculty consultants. The consultants may be working for pay or for college credit. If the writing center offers workshop or group tutoring sessions, staff, experienced undergraduates, or graduates may serve in an unofficial or official
teaching assistant capacity. In many cases, writing center directors or writing program administrators (WPAs) are responsible for conducting
writing center assessment, and must communicate these results to
academic administration and various
stakeholders. Assessment is seen as beneficial for writing centers because it creates a professional and
ethical environment that is important not just for writing centers but for all higher education. == Types of writers served==