Community Writing Center
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Staff
Advisory Committees
Writing Partners
![]() | Elisa Stone Elisa is the Associate Director of the Community Writing Center and an Associate Professor of English at Salt Lake Community College, where she received the Utah Campus Compact’s Engaged Scholar Award as the College’s Service-Learning Faculty Mentor. She has volunteered alongside students at various non-profit organizations, and is a consultant to the State Office of Education in creating technical writing curriculum for Utah high schools. She adores animals, the ocean, and traveling. |
The Writing Assistants at the CWC come from diverse backgrounds and have each receive extensive training in writing coaching, workshop facilitation, and collaboration.
John Reay: Writing Assistant—Youth Program Coordinator
John Reay is an English student at Salt Lake Community College. A self-made scholar of the Beat Generation, John studies the writers involved in order to better understand the massive social change that followed their works. A lonesome traveler himself, John has hitched the West Coast in order to better know America. John often jots poetry, prose and essays when not too busy with academics. Hoping to complete his studies and one day be a dusty old professor, John now passes the days with Professor Dostoevsky in a dusty basement lined with books.
Jordan Loveridge: Writing Assistant – Offsite Programs Coordinator
Jordan Loveridge holds a B.A. in English from Westminster College. Jordan is an uninspired wretch, who very rarely writes creatively—however, he does love to pen stodgy academic pieces, as well as the occasional angry letter to a public official. He has spent considerable time helping speakers of other languages practice writ-ten English and, much to his dismay, has recently taken up blogging. Consequently, his free time is mostly spent chronicling the oddities of the English language and reading Marvel comics.
![]() | Nkenna Onwuzuruoha: Nkenna Onwuzuruoha (or better known as Kenna O.) is a Georgia girl exploring life out West after four years of college up north and a two year stint abroad teaching English in France and completing a Masters in England. Her writing for the past few years has been primarily academic sprinkled with abandoned blogs and coltish emails to close friends. As an AmeriCorps VISTA, she hopes to bridge partnerships with local organizations that will strengthen CWC’s civic endeavors. She’ll use her down time for walking, biking, hiking, rediscovering anaphora, tricolons, and all other rhetorical devices she loved but cannot remember from high school Latin, and summer festivals. |
Community Advisory Committee
Our Community Advisory Committee is comprised of active community members and/or professional writers and editors who advise the CWC on innovative ways to achieve its mission of supporting, motivating and educating people of all abilities and educational backgrounds who want to use writing for practical needs, civic engagement and personal expression.Shauna Bona is a founder and copresident of McKinnon-Mulherin, Inc., a company that provides writing and editing expertise to corporations, nonprofits, and government agencies. Although most of her time is spent working directly with clients (i.e., sales), she is also in charge of training the McKinnon-Mulherin team. When she isn't working, she focuses her time on her teen-age daughter Sophie and on volunteer work for the Girl Scouts and the Salt Lake City Rotary Club.
Louis Borgenicht is a pediatrician and writer. He is an Adjunct Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Utah and has taught courses in Literature and Medicine for the Division of Continuing Education at the University of Utah. His articles have appeared in Catalyst, Utah Holiday, City Weekly and the Salt Lake Tribune as well as professional medical journals. He is an inveterate writer of letters to the editor and is currently working on a book that will include a section of his unpublished political diatribes.
Stephen Goldsmith is Curator of The Temporary Museum of Permanent Change.
Anne Holman, Manager of King's English Bookshop, has been a reader since she was old enough to hold a book. It never occurred to her that a person could actually have a job where books and people could come together and one could actually earn money doing it. Will wonders never cease?
Donna Land-Maldonado is General Manager and radio host for KRCL.
Gail McCulloch is a playwright, instructor and librarian; she has an MFA in Playwriting from the University of Utah and was a professor of Theatre at Westminster College for nine years.
Dawn Marano is president and senior editor of Dawn Marano & Associates, a literary consulting and developmental editing firm. Previously she served as an editor at the University of Utah Press, where she published many nationally recognized authors of nonfiction. She teaches writing for the University of Utah's Lifelong Learning program and serves as chair of the advisory board for the Writers @ Work annual conference. Marano is a co-author of When We Say We're Home: A Quartet of Place and Memory, a work of literary nonfiction. Her poetry and prose have appeared in several publications and anthologies, and her work has been cited among Notable Essays in The Best American Essays. Her memoir Trusting the Edge won the Utah Arts Council Original Writing Competition for Nonfiction Book in 2005 and the Publication Prize in 2006.
Robin Pratt, originally from California, has a background in psychology and business. Her articles and essays on topics including parenting, health, music, alumni perspectives, community and women's issues have been published in regional and national magazines, on public radio, and online; her first book was published in 2006. In addition to freelance writing, Robin has worked as a website writer and small nonprofit administrator. She currently lives and writes in Salt Lake City with her husband and their two sons.
Ken Verdoia is the extremely rare journalist who has worked in newspaper, magazine, radio, commercial television and public television on the local, regional and national level, Ken presently provides overall direction of program production for KUED-TV in Salt Lake City. He also serves as an adjunct faculty member in the Department of Communication at the University of Utah. Ken is the recipient of seventeen Emmy Awards and has been twice honored for producing the best television news documentary in America. He is a fellow of the American Political Science Association, a Lifetime Achievement honoree from the National Academy of Television Arts and Science, and author and media consultant to Fortune 500, federal government and professional sports (NBA, MLB, NFL) clients.
Academic Advisory Committee
Our Academic Advisory Committee is comprised of educators from local higher education institutions and K-12 schools/districts who advise the CWC on innovative pedagogical approaches, facilitate opportunities for research and scholarship and explore avenues for student involvement in and through the CWC.
Clint Gardner (Chair) is the Coordinator of the Salt Lake Community College (SLCC) Student Writing Center in Salt Lake City, Utah. He currently serves as Past President of the International Writing Centers Association (IWCA), having completed hist two-year term as President in 2007. His writing center research and development include the work of peer writing consultants (tutors) in a community college writing center and the use of online resources to bring writing center services who cannot attend the Student Writing Center in person. One the most important aspects of his writing center work is to support and offer feedback to the student writers who come to the SLCC Student Writing Center, as well as to the SLCC Students who work as peer writing consultants in the Center. Clint teaches college composition and literature with a particular interest in discourse studies and genre theory. His literary interest include Shakespeare and British Modernists.
Geoffrey Brugger, SLCC School of Arts and Communications
Larry Christensen, SLCC Psychology Department
Ron Christiansen, SLCC English Department
Daniel Emery, University of Utah Writing Program
John Fritz, SLCC Department of History and Anthropology
Dean Huber, SLCC ESL Department
Tom Huckin, University of Utah Writing Program
Jay Jordan, University of Utah Writing Program
Lynn Kilpatrick, SLCC English Department
Chris LeCluyse is an assistant professor of English and writing center director at Westminster College in Salt Lake City. After studying English and vocal performance at Oberlin College, he received his PhD from the University of Texas at Austin, where he specialized in the history of the English language and linguistics. In graduate school Chris became involved in writing center administration and later filled interim positions at UT and Southwestern University before coming to Westminster. His research looks at writing center practice through the lenses of ancient rhetoric and medieval literacy. He is also a professional singer of choral and early music, performing with Conspirare (Austin), Magnificat (San Francisco), and a variety of ensembles in Salt Lake.
Maureen Mathison, University of Utah Writing Program
Lois Oestreich, SLCC Pre-Teacher Education
Jennifer Ritter, SLCC English Department
Cheryl Shurtleff, SLCC Skills Center, ESL
Enrique Velasquez, SLCC Division of Social and Behavioral Sciences
Betsy Ward is the Director of the Thayne Center for Service & Learning, which coordinates civic participation, service-learning, and volunteerism efforts at Salt Lake Community College. Her background is in community outreach, including experience as a Peace Corps volunteer in Poland and a VISTA volunteer in rural Washington state. She earned a bachelor’s degree in English and a master’s degree in American Studies from Utah State University.
Sundy Watanabe, University of Utah Writing Center
Writing Partners are non-profit organizations, government agencies, businesses, and educational institutions that work with the CWC to address their writing needs. This service can be used to empower clients, staff, and volunteers through workshops and individual consulting. Topics range from grant and business writing to creative writing and public service announcements. To inquire about the Writing Partners program please contact Andrea Malouf at (801) 957-2192 or submit our inquiry form.
- Featured Partner
- Past Featured Partners
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Writing Partners F.A.Q.
Find Many of Our CWC Partners
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Featured Partner:
Salt Lake City Public Library

With the Salt Lake City Public Library downtown and five branches located throughout the city, there's bound to be a city library close to where you live or work. And now the SLCC Community Writing Center is partnering with the Salt Lake City Public Library for these three exciting new programs!
West High School Family Resource Center | ![]() |
West High School, established in 1890, is located at 241 North 300 West in Salt Lake City. The West High School Family Resource Center (FRC) provides educational resources and information about jobs, housing, legal aid and domestic violence to the extended West High School student and parent population. It also serves as a point of access for the West High population regarding clothing and food resources and dentistry and family support voucher programs.
The SLCC Community Writing Center (CWC) partnered with the West High FRC in September 2011 to offer CWC programs to the students and parents at West High. CWC writing coaches offer free after-school weekly writing coaching sessions to West students. The coaching sessions, conducted on-site at West High, focus on students’ academic assignments and preparing college application essays, personal statements, and scholarship essays. The CWC, in collaboration with the West FRC, has also conducted full writing workshops at West High that provide detailed information for students and parents regarding the process of writing college application and scholarship essays.
Venture Course |
The Venture Course in the Humanities provides adults facing economic barriers with a chance to start college. Modeled on the Clemente Course in the HumanitiesSM, created by educator and journalist Earl Shorris in 1995 and now an international movement, Venture is a year-long, introductory humanities course taught by university and college faculty. In Utah, the course is run in Salt Lake, Ogden, and Cedar City and includes sections in literature, American history, art history, philosophy, and writing/critical thinking. Successful students of Venture in Salt Lake City receive credits transferable to Westminster College.
Venture Course meets twice a week at Horizonte Instruction and Training Center. Students are given a writing assignment each class and write essays throughout the semester. In partnership with the Utah Humanities Council, 2011 marked the first year of the SLCC Writing Center offering writing coaching to Venture students once a week before class at Horizonte.
Salt Lake County Jail System |
Since the introduction of Salt Lake County’s Life Skills program, 49 groups of between 25 and 30 participants have graduated. The program, which emphasizes a wide range of skills, from personal finance to parenting, has been deemed a success on both a local and national level. Central to the program is the “Heroes” program, which asks participants to critically analyze their legacy and asks an important question: would you be proud for your children to call you their hero? Often, the answers to this question are mixed, and for the majority of the program, participants will grapple with their answers, both verbally and through writing. In collaboration with the Salt Lake County Jail system, the Community Writing Center facilitates a two part writing process workshop, which has since become a consistent part of the larger Life Skills curriculum. CWC facilitators guide participants through the writing process, allowing writers to explore planning, brainstorming, drafting and revision through their own writing. The participant writers gain both an opportunity to reflect on their assigned questions, and writing skills to apply to a variety of scenarios once they are released.
Additionally, the Salt Lake Community College Community Writing Center partners with the Salt Lake County Metro Jail in order to provide a rotating series of creative writing workshops to jail’s female inmates. Every 3 weeks, CWC facilitators recruit interested women for two part workshops, which in the past have focused on creative non-fiction, poetry, and fiction. During these workshops, writers are introduced to new formats and genres, given the chance to write freely and creatively, and also receive feedback from facilitators and fellow writers. Often, the women continue their work after the workshops have ended, and either share their new material and later workshops or at the CWC upon release.
Currently, the Salt Lake County Jail system is one of the CWC’s largest partnerships; to date, more than 200 writers have participated in the CWC’s jail programming since August 2011.
Writing For Change |
| Does change in democracy require civic dialogue? If so, where is it and who gets to talk? Or write? Join the SLCC Community Writing Center as we learn the techniques of civic writing, such as Letters to Editors and Public Officials. Come with a concern; stay to write a letter with the help of SLCC Community Writing Center writing coaches. |
One City Westside Stories |
| Salt Lake City may be the biggest small town in the west, but it consists of many smaller diverse communities. In partnership with the Salt Lake City Public Library, the SLCC Community Writing Center presents One City: Westside Stories. This program invites community members living on the Westside to participate in mutual dialogue about their community. High school students and senior citizens will interview each other about their experiences living in this vibrant community. The interview teams will write stories after the interviews. Podcasts and writing will be shared on-line to create a portrait of the Westside. High School teachers, senior citizens, and community volunteers are encouraged to be involved. |
Past Featured Partners
Chapman Library
“Every writer,” Jeremy claims, “should take the opportunity to play a roleplaying game. The skills these games can offer are invaluable.”
Creation of the story will be an ongoing experience for the teens this year. Upon completion, they will assist in designing a printed copy of their work to make available to patrons of the library. They will also be submitting their adventure to Wizards of the Coast, publishers of the Dungeons and Dragons game, with the hope of official publication.
Additional Writing Partners
Since opening, the Community Writing Center has partnered with a variety of organizations:














