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General Suggestions for Developing a Marketing Piece for
Your Campus (instructors, faculty, and/or administrators)
Many people will be interested in NSSE findings because
writing is important to them for one or a number of reasons. You can use these
NSSE findings as an opportunity to connect with those on your campus who care
and link your program’s work with them. Here are a few tips that might help:
- Ground your work in your local context. Choose one or two
aspects of NSSE findings that you think especially important or useful, and
connect your work to them. You’ll have the most impact working locally – with
people on your campus, with your campus newspaper, or (in some cases) with
local media.
- Connect with your campus public relations or marketing director. Most
campuses have personnel responsible for making contacts with external
(off-campus) media. NSSE findings are a great opportunity to start a
conversation about how your program enacts some of the beneficial teaching
practices described in the findings.
- Contact the op-ed editor of your campus and/or local
newspaper about doing an op-ed piece. Unless you live in a major media
market, op-ed editors are often looking for good op-ed pieces. You can
find tips on writing op-eds on the WPA Network for Media Action site:
wpacouncil.org/nma.
- Use NSSE findings to develop connections to people
across campus who might also be interested. For instance, such as a
director of faculty development. When you share the results, connect with their interest. For example, you might follow a statement about the connections
between writing and increased engagement with a query about meeting with
the faculty development director to brainstorm opportunities to foster
this engagement across campus.
Whatever you do, Lead your discussion or written statement
with a concise, clear, and positive statement about the findings and connect
your local work to it in equally clear, concise, and positive ways.
More writing tips are available from the Council of Writing
Program Administrators Network for Media Action: wpacouncil.org/nma and
http://wpacouncil.org/communication-strategies |
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