Place-based WAC/WID Hui2015-12-022015-12-022013-11-212015Tokunaga, Marshall. 'Student interview for Place-Based WAC/WID writing instruction in Social Work, clip 18 of 18.' Interview with Jim Henry and Dawne Bost. Scholarspace. Sep. 2015. Web.http://hdl.handle.net/10125/38443This item includes a segment of an a student interview in a Writing Intensive course in Social Work at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. The interview was conducted in 2013 and in this clip the interviewee is responding with possible ways to transfer the writing methods from this course to other courses.Brief excerpt from interview: [The instructor] likes a really detailed outline. My outlines, I would do the introduction, body, conclusion, and then in there I would maybe have a topic sentence for each thing or each paragraph that I would write for the different sections. What [the instructor] likes is actually writing not only the topic sentence but what you would put in there . . . When you finally do the final paper, you do some grammatical changes . . . Since [his] class, I do still make a little more detailed outline, but I go back to my old way because it takes me forever to even write the outline.Duration: 00:01:53Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United Statesplace-based writingwriting across the curriculumwriting in the disciplinesWriting Intensive coursesscholarship of teaching and learningwriting pedagogygeneral education requirementskind of learningwriting methodsoutlining writingdetailed outlinesintroductionbodyconclusiontopic sentenceparagraphmind mappingbrainstormingprewritingbubble diagramStudent interview for Place-Based WAC/WID writing instruction in Social Work, clip 18 of 18Interview