βWriting is easy,β journalist Gene Fowler famously quipped. βAll you do is sit staring at a blank sheet of paper until drops of blood form on your forehead.β Well-intentioned as that tip may be, Mr. Fowlerβs technique would never work with todayβs 91΄σΙρ Northampton students. For one thing, students do most of their writing on Surface Pro tablets, not paper. And two, they have the 91΄σΙρ Writing Center.
Tucked in a cozy space on the second floor of the Clapp Memorial Library, the Writing Center is a welcoming haven. Encouraging quotations hang from the ceiling (βExperience is the name everyone gives to their mistakes.ββOscar Wilde), and a comfortable central conference table beckons like something out of an Internet coffee shop. On busy evenings, especially, the place hums with students at work, a creative community of writers and scholars. βIt was one of my favorite places on campus,β recalls Cameron Hill β15, now in her first year at Yale. βMs. Sawyer is so encouraging and welcoming to anyone who wants to improve their writing.β
That would be Sarah Sawyer, the Writing Centerβs founder, tireless advocate, and fun-loving brand ambassador. When she launched the center 10 years ago, she was newly hired from Amherst College, where, as a writing fellow, she had seen firsthand the benefits that a college writing center can bring to students. Today, joined by English Department Head Adrienne Mantegna β94 and College Counseling Director Tim Cheney, she and her team of trained peer tutors offer students one-on-one guidance, instruction, and feedback on anything from English homework assignments to history research papers to that most formidable of tasks, the college essay. Each year, students visit the center more than a 1,000 times.