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{{Short description|Website offering resources on writing}}
{{unreferenced|date=January 2011}}
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An '''Online Writing Lab''' (OWL) is often an extension of a university [[writing center]]. Online writing labs offer help to students and other writers by providing [[literacy]] materials, such as handouts and [[overhead projector|slide presentations]]. Writers may also submit questions electronically for feedback. Many OWLs are open to people unaffiliated with the specific institution. Online writing labs play an important part in writing center assistance because they allow writers to use some of the center’s resources remotely.
{{More citations needed|date=January 2011}}
An '''Online Writing Lab''' ('''OWL''') is often an extension of a university [[writing center]]. Online writing labs offer help to students and other writers by providing [[literacy]] materials, such as handouts and [[overhead projector|slide presentations]]. Writers may also submit questions electronically for feedback. Many OWLs are open to people unaffiliated with the specific institution. Online writing labs play an important part in writing center assistance by allowing writers to use some of the center's resources remotely.


[[Purdue University]] in [[West Lafayette, Indiana]], USA]] launched the first OWL in 1994.
[[Purdue University]], in [[West Lafayette, Indiana]], launched the first OWL, in 1994. Its OWL is freely available online to all, and includes handouts, specific subject information, resources geared towards students in grades 7–12,<ref>[https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/677/01/ Purdue University]</ref> and citation formatting help with MLA, APA and other forms.<ref>https://owl.english.purdue.edu</ref>


==OWL history==
==OWL history==
In 1976, the Department of English at Purdue University asked Dr. Muriel "Mickey" Harris to establish its Writing Lab, a [[campus]]-based service designed to assist learners in their rhetorical writing processes. Harris began the Writing Lab by collaborating with a team of graduate assistants, who worked one-to-one with student writers and often developed handouts to reinforce the lessons the students learned in the Writing Lab. The writing tutors and Harris sent paper copies of their materials to individuals beyond Purdue University who contacted the Writing Lab requesting information on writing, citation, or research. Later, these resources became available electronically through [[email]] requests and through [[GOPHER]] in 1993, a precursor to the [[World Wide Web]]. Harris and the Purdue Writing Lab launched its OWL on the web in 1995, making it one of the first OWLs on the Internet. Having made its library of resources available electronically, the Purdue OWL <ref>[http://owl.english.purdue.edu%20 The Purdue OWL]. </ref> is now accessed by millions of users worldwide.
In 1976, the Department of English at Purdue University asked Muriel "Mickey" Harris to establish a writing lab, a [[campus]]-based service designed to assist learners in their rhetorical writing processes. Harris began the writing lab by collaborating with a team of graduate assistants, who worked one-to-one with student writers, often authoring handouts to reinforce lessons in the writing lab. Harris and the tutors sent paper copies of their materials to individuals beyond Purdue University who had contacted the writing lab, requesting information on writing, citation, or research; these resources later became available electronically, through [[email]] requests and through [[GOPHER]] (a precursor to the [[World Wide Web]]), in 1993. Harris and the Purdue Writing Lab launched its OWL on the web, in 1995, then among the first OWLs on the [[Internet]]. Having made its library of resources available electronically, the Purdue OWL<ref>[http://owl.english.purdue.edu The Purdue OWL]</ref> became accessible to millions of users worldwide.

==References==
{{Reflist|2}}


== External links==
== External links==
* [http://writingcenters.org/owcdb/index.php The International Writing Center Association's list of OWLs]
* [http://writingcenters.org/owcdb/index.php The International Writing Center Association's list of OWLs]


[[Category:1994 establishments in Indiana]]

[[Category:Academia]]
[[Category:Academia]]
[[Category:Composition (language)]]
[[Category:Internet properties established in 1994]]
[[Category:Purdue University]]

Latest revision as of 18:58, 24 February 2024

An Online Writing Lab (OWL) is often an extension of a university writing center. Online writing labs offer help to students and other writers by providing literacy materials, such as handouts and slide presentations. Writers may also submit questions electronically for feedback. Many OWLs are open to people unaffiliated with the specific institution. Online writing labs play an important part in writing center assistance by allowing writers to use some of the center's resources remotely.

Purdue University, in West Lafayette, Indiana, launched the first OWL, in 1994. Its OWL is freely available online to all, and includes handouts, specific subject information, resources geared towards students in grades 7–12,[1] and citation formatting help with MLA, APA and other forms.[2]

OWL history[edit]

In 1976, the Department of English at Purdue University asked Muriel "Mickey" Harris to establish a writing lab, a campus-based service designed to assist learners in their rhetorical writing processes. Harris began the writing lab by collaborating with a team of graduate assistants, who worked one-to-one with student writers, often authoring handouts to reinforce lessons in the writing lab. Harris and the tutors sent paper copies of their materials to individuals beyond Purdue University who had contacted the writing lab, requesting information on writing, citation, or research; these resources later became available electronically, through email requests and through GOPHER (a precursor to the World Wide Web), in 1993. Harris and the Purdue Writing Lab launched its OWL on the web, in 1995, then among the first OWLs on the Internet. Having made its library of resources available electronically, the Purdue OWL[3] became accessible to millions of users worldwide.

References[edit]

External links[edit]