The National Writing Project focuses the knowledge, expertise, and
leadership of our nation's educators on sustained efforts to improve
writing and learning for all learners.
Our Mission
The National Writing Project focuses the knowledge, expertise, and
leadership of our nation's educators on sustained efforts to improve
writing and learning for all learners.
Our Vision
Writing in its many forms is the signature means of communication in
the 21st century. The NWP envisions a future where every person is an
accomplished writer, engaged learner, and active participant in a
digital, interconnected world.
Who We Are
Unique in breadth and scale, the NWP is a network of sites
anchored at colleges and universities and serving teachers across
disciplines and at all levels, early childhood through university. We
provide professional development, develop resources, generate research,
and act on knowledge to improve the teaching of writing and learning in
schools and communities.
The National Writing Project believes that access to high-quality
educational experiences is a basic right of all learners and a
cornerstone of equity. We work in partnership with institutions,
organizations, and communities to develop and sustain leadership for
educational improvement. Throughout our work, we value and seek
diversity—our own as well as that of our students and their
communities—and recognize that practice is strengthened when we
incorporate multiple ways of knowing that are informed by culture and
experience.
A Network of University-Based Sites
Co-directed by faculty from the local university and from K–12 schools, more than 200 local sites
serve all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the
U.S. Virgin Islands. Sites work in partnership with area school
districts to offer high-quality professional development programs for
educators. NWP continues to add new sites each year, with the goal of
placing a writing project site within reach of every teacher in America.
The network now includes two associated international sites.
A Successful Model Customized for Local Needs
NWP sites share a national program model,
adhering to a set of shared principles and practices for teachers’
professional development, and offering programs that are common across
the network. In addition to developing a leadership cadre of local
teachers (called “teacher-consultants”) through invitational summer
institutes, NWP sites design and deliver customized inservice programs
for local schools, districts, and higher education institutions, and
they provide a diverse array of continuing education and research
opportunities for teachers at all levels.
National research studies have confirmed significant gains in writing performance among students of teachers who have participated in NWP programs.
The NWP is the only federally funded program that focuses on the
teaching of writing. Support for the NWP is provided by the U.S.
Department of Education, foundations, corporations, universities, and
K-12 schools.
NWP Core Principles
The core principles at the foundation of NWP’s national program model are:
- Teachers at every level—from kindergarten through college—are the
agents of reform; universities and schools are ideal partners for
investing in that reform through professional development.
- Writing can and should be taught, not just assigned, at every
grade level. Professional development programs should provide
opportunities for teachers to work together to understand the full
spectrum of writing development across grades and across subject areas.
- Knowledge about the teaching of writing comes from many sources:
theory and research, the analysis of practice, and the experience of
writing. Effective professional development programs provide frequent
and ongoing opportunities for teachers to write and to examine theory,
research, and practice together systematically.
- There is no single right approach to teaching writing; however,
some practices prove to be more effective than others. A reflective and
informed community of practice is in the best position to design and
develop comprehensive writing programs.
- Teachers who are well informed and effective in their practice
can be successful teachers of other teachers as well as partners in
educational research, development, and implementation. Collectively,
teacher-leaders are our greatest resource for educational reform.