Practitioner Inquiry for Praxis and Research: Professionalization vis-a-vis Collaboration in the Writing Center
Abstract
This pilot study details how a Practitioner Inquiry methodology was
implemented as both a practice and research heuristic in our center.
I explain how I draw from the foundational tenets of Practitioner
Inquiry (Nordstrom) to foster collaboration among consultants and
between consultants and the director in the running of our center.
At the same time, I employ Practitioner Inquiry as a framework to
produce Replicable, Aggregable, Data-supported (RAD) research to
determine the efficacy of this approach in terms of consultant
learning and their professionalization through qualitative and
quantitative discourse analysis on consultants’ end-of-semester
anonymous evaluations of their experiences working in the center.
Recent scholarship points to the potential benefits that working in
writing centers facilitates for consultants (Kail et al.), and represents
our centers as pedagogical spaces that engender consultant learning
and professionalization. This article furthers this work through an
empirical investigation of the less examined subtopic of the
director-consultant relationship in the context of the administration
of the center. In addition, it acts as a case study that illustrates the
efficacy of Practitioner Inquiry as a methodology for both practice
and research.