Event overview
Here you will find all our regular interactive workshops and a wide range of event formats relating to academic writing for students, doctoral candidates and lecturers.
Online or in presence? We think both are good! Just take a look at the respective page of the program to see which format it takes place in.
Writing events
With an exclusive range of workshops, advice and active breaks, the four-day writing days offer you an ideal writing space to work on your writing project continuously and with motivation.
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Are you looking for motivation to move your writing project forward? Then our writing group is just the thing for you. The focus here is on exchanging ideas with other students. You will be supported by writing challenges and a pool of methods. The writing group is aimed at students of all disciplines.
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It's easier to write together than alone. And now we know how well it works digitally!
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Workshops for students
Workshops for PhD students and researchers
This one-day workshop focusses on the process of writing in the narrower sense and shows various possibilities, procedures, exercises and strategies on how to get PhD dissertations going. The workshop is aimed at PhD students from all faculties who are just starting to write or are in the middle of a writing phase.
PhD students in the final months of their doctorate meet (digitally) for self-directed writing and working groups to motivate themselves in the final metres of their dissertation, to work in a focused manner and to exchange ideas about challenges. In addition, there are regular short focus meetings to set goals and write. The focus meetings are framed by three half-day workshops, which offer time for writing in addition to content input.
Workshops for lecturers
Peer feedback in your course! With the textographer programme, we want to strengthen writing in the subjects and support writing-oriented teaching that combines subject area content and academic writing. Textographers are students from your subject area who are trained by us and accompany your subject-specific course for a semester with text feedback for your students.
Plagiarism is often only seen as annoying misbehaviour on the part of students, but it also raises key questions about academic practice or indicates that important practices are unclear. The one-day workshop for lecturers provides information on the very different causes of plagiarism and shows how students can be supported in acquiring skills that make copying superfluous.