You can listen to Scrawl radio every Friday from 11am-noon on Radio DePaul through the Radio DePaul app, and on ITUNES by searching the UCWbL. When played, you draw cards until you have 10 in hand (not counting Scrawl itself), and then Scrawl is Exhausted. They also analyzed the type of rhetorical devices that horoscopes use and why they tend to seem so unique, yet general. During the episode, they described how horoscopes and tarot cards attempt to predict what will happen, which is a form of predicting “next steps” while tutoring. Inside the box is everything you need, including 8 white board pens and 8 little felt board wipes, 8 bulldog clips and writing boards, loads of Scrawl cards for writing/drawing on, scorecards and game cards with 240 different scenarios to play. You have to draw ludicrous things like, A Monkey Knife Fight or A Haunted Oven, then pass it on. To answer that question, Brendan P, Kate H, and Kathryn T invited Lauri Dietz, Director of the University Center for Writing-based Learning and tarot cards extraordinaire, to talk about how peering into the future is directly related to agenda setting during Writing Center appointments. You don’t have to be good at drawing to play Scrawl. Revealing the terrible artist in all of us, players in Scrawl start off with a loaded phrase, doodle it, then pass it on. You may be wondering what astrology and tarot cards have to do with peer tutoring. Welcome back Scrawl Nation! For this episode of Scrawl, we examined astrology and tarot cards.
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