Site icon

CFP | 2025 CWCA/ACCR conference

Precarity, Pluckiness, and “Please Help!”: Negotiating Uncertainty in Writing Centre Work

CWCA/ACCR 2025 Virtual Conference
June 16-18, 2025

Access a PDF version of this Call for Proposals

Please submit your proposals via this FORM.

Use this guide to help with you proposals: Writing a conference proposal: A step-by-step guide

Deadline: All submissions must be received by February 14, 2025.


“The CWCA/ACCR community is rich with experience, diverse perspectives, and, perhaps, pluckiness, but it is worth acknowledging that it is threatened by the very precarity experienced by its individual members.” ~ Dr. Stevie Bell

“All progress is precarious.” ~ Martin Luther King, Jr.

The Canadian Writing Centres Association / association canadienne des centres de rédaction welcomes proposals for our 2025 conference related to any aspect of writing centre study and practice, with particular interest in proposals that explore the multifaceted nature of precarity and agency in writing centres.

During last year’s conference, the panel on “Precarious Presence and Fruitful Futures in Writing Studies” opened a discussion on the ways writing centre professionals experience precarity in our work. The discussion also included themes of how we might advocate for ourselves on an individual, institutional, and national level.  Since this conversation, many experiences of precarity in our CWCA/ACCR community have escalated in unsettling ways. Some of us may be feeling resourceful and plucky. Others may be feeling decidedly not.  Writing centres, situated at the intersections and margins of institutional structures, have long had to negotiate the tension between precarity, agency, and burnout.

Questions and considerations for this year’s conference include the following: In what ways are writing centres experiencing progress that is precarious, and, in what ways does writing centre precarity challenge or inhibit progress? In the face of precarity, how do writing centre professionals secure progress for our writing centres? In the face of precarity, how do writing centre professionals guard against burnout?  In what ways are precarity and agency invisible or unacknowledged in writing centre work? How have writing centres historically navigated precarious times?   How might we incorporate healthy boundaries into our common writing centre life to avoid burnout? How do we exercise agency in the face of uncertainty?

Other possible connections to the theme include but are not limited to:

We welcome proposals that address these and other related topics through diverse perspectives and methodologies. Submissions may include, but are not limited to:

Submission Guidelines:

Submission Process:

Please submit your proposals via this FORM. For any inquiries, contact chtaylor@wlu.ca.

We look forward to your proposals.

Writing Mercies,

Christin Wright-Taylor, M.F.A., Ph.D.
Vice President, Canadian Writing Centres Association / association canadienne des centres de rédaction

Manager, Writing Services
Wilfrid Laurier University

Exit mobile version