CornellSun.com Topic

FWS

Correcting News When Facts Prove Dubious

Rob Tricchinelli  —  Sep 29, 2009

A front-page, above-the-fold story in the Sep. 21 issue of The Sun, “Undergrads May Teach FWS to Reduce Cost,” caused some distress; it turned out to be wrong. When a front-page story is not correct, a comprehensive look is worth the effort. A few factors were at play here, and The Sun has since taken steps to do right by its sources and its readers.

Taken at its face, the story seemed like a real scoop. With a foundering endowment and a call for spending cuts, departments across Cornell are making difficult decisions on a tighter budget; hypothetically, having undergraduates teach First-Year Writing Seminars might help reduce costs. It might also alleviate problems associated with a growing undergraduate population but a declining number of graduate students.

To the Editor: Graduate students proved effective instructors

Sep 24, 2009

To the Editor:

Re: “Undergrads May Teach FWS to Reduce Cost,” News, Sept. 21

I am writing to provide some clarification to my quotes in this article. I feel that, through no one’s fault but my own, my quotes may have been slightly misunderstood. I now realize that I was unclear in expressing my sentiments aptly during the interview.

Knight Institute Not Considering Undergrads to Teach FWS, Contrary to Prior Reports

Yi-Ke Peng  —  Sep 21, 2009

Editor's Note: The following article includes inaccurate reporting suggesting that the Knight Institute may hire undergraduates to teach First-Year Writing Seminars. In fact, the Knight Institute is not considering employing undergraduates as instructors for such courses. Updated coverage can be found here.

In a few years, first-year and transfer students entering Cornell might be sitting in a First-Year Writing Seminar taught by a fellow undergraduate.

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