Application: Assistantship to Teach or Tutor
Teaching Statement
For Academic Year 2009-2010
If you wish to apply for an assistantship teaching first-year writing or tutoring in the Writing Lab, please write a response to the following prompt.
Most graduate students who apply for assistantships in English have no prior teaching experience, and yet all who apply have spent many years in classrooms as students, have observed good teachers (in and/or out of school), and have made observations about themselves as learners. Many have informal teaching/tutoring experience, for example, helping siblings with writing tasks, teaching guitar to a friend, or working with youth groups on scout badges, church endeavors, or sports teams. In these ways, all applicants have a storehouse of experience that informs how they think about teaching and learning.
Please draw on these experiences and any other pertinent background as you explain how you see teaching and/or tutoring fitting into your career as a graduate student and beyond. Your response should help us understand you as a student of English studies and a potential teacher/tutor of college students.
A rough guideline for length is one to two pages, but what you have to say will determine the length of your response. (In other words, longer is not necessarily better, nor is shorter.)
Those who will read your response are English Department faculty who sit on the Graduate Committee:
Frank Grady, Graduate Director
Suellynn Duffey, Writing Program Administrator
Mary Troy, MFA Director
Sally Ebest
John Dalton
Nancy Singer
Richard Cook (ex officio)
Questions? E-mail Susan
Grant or phone 314/516-5590. Or write:
Susan Grant, Assistant Director, MFA Program
Department of English
University of Missouri-St. Louis
8001 Natural Bridge Road
St. Louis, MO 63121
Campus
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Revised November 2008