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Thomas D. Clark Study

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Location:
W. T. Young Library, Thomas D. Clark Study, 5th Floor,
West Wing
Phone: 257-1368
Hours:
Second Summer Session 2008 Hours (June 9 -
July 30):
Monday: 1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Tuesday: 1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Wednesday: 1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Thursday: 1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Friday: CLOSED
Schedule an
Appointment Online |
Services
If you would like to schedule an appointment in advance,
please call (257-1368) or
schedule one online,
but we also accept drop-in visits. If you come without an
appointment, we try to have consultants available on the
half-hour to assist you.
Please bring your assignment sheet (and any other information
about your project) with you to the consultation. Also, if you
prefer to work on a computer, please bring along a jump drive.
Late Policy
Due to high demand, we are only able to hold appointments for
five minutes. After that time, appointments may be given away to
walk in clients. For this reason, it is important that all
clients are on time or early for their appointments, or, if
lateness is unavoidable, that clients call to let us know they
are running late.
Mission
The Writing Center assists University of Kentucky students,
faculty, and staff with the process of writing. Staffed by
English graduate students, full-time instructors, part-time
consultants, and undergraduate peer tutors, the Center offers
free individual and group consultations on prewriting, writing,
and rewriting.
We respond in this way because we believe that writing isn't
like laundry: it's not something you can drop off for cleaning,
then pick up an hour later. We believe that the best way to help
you write a better paper (or resume, or letter) is to help you
think in productive, sometimes even exciting ways about yourself
as a writer. We try to help you think about the purpose of your
particular writing (aside from getting a good grade!), about the
audience for your writing and your relation to that audience,
and about ways to organize your writing--from sections to
paragraphs to sentences to individual words and marks of
punctuation.
We respond as we do, in other words, because we're committed
to helping you become a better writer. If you work with us on a
single piece of writing through several sessions, there may well
come a time when it's appropriate to focus on grammar,
punctuation, and other editing matters. As a general rule,
however, that's not where we start in our responses to your
work.
for problems with the website, please E-Mail
rdrice2@uky.edu
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