Fairfield’s Writing, Math, and Science Centers aid our students’ success in all classes and fields of study.
Writing, Math & Science Centers
DiMenna-Nyselius Library
The Writing, Science, and Math Centers are located in Fairfield’s beautiful DiMenna-Nyselius Library. The central location allows convenience for students looking for support with their classwork.
The Writing Center
At the Writing Center, a trained peer tutor will work individually (both in-person and virtually) with students on anything they are writing, at any point in the writing process. The tutoring process aims to be collaborative; peer tutors do not write, proofread, or grade papers for students without the direct input of the students they are tutoring.
The Writing Center is located on the main floor of the DiMenna-Nyselius Library, NYS 218.
The Math Center
The Mathematics Center is where Fairfield University students can get free tutoring for their first-year core math classes (Precalculus, Calculus, Statistics). We offer drop-in tutoring and one-on-one tutoring appointments.
The Math Center is located on the main floor of the DiMenna-Nyselius Library, NYS 217.
The Science Center
The Science Center at Fairfield University is a new space that will provide expanded peer tutoring for all the foundational natural sciences courses. These courses include General Biology, General Chemistry, General Chemistry for Health Science, Organic Chemistry, General Physics, General Physics for Life Sciences, Anatomy and Physiology, Behavioral Neuroscience, and Statistics for Behavioral Sciences.
The Science Center is located on the main floor of the DiMenna-Nyselius Library, a part of the Academic Commons.
Frequently Asked Questions
Any undergraduate or graduate student from any major or department across campus is welcome to visit the Writing Center.
All writers, at any stage in their writing, can benefit from feedback and careful response to their projects. The tutors in the Writing Center can work with you on any aspect of your writing project, from brainstorming and idea development to revising and editing.
Definitely not. The tutors can work with you on writing that you are doing just for fun (they love that!) as well as on resumes, cover letters, and applications for jobs and internships. If you want (or need) to write it, they'll read it!
The tutors are undergraduate and graduate students. Undergraduate students have successfully completed a semester-long, three credit course focused on responding to writing. In addition, the tutors continue to develop response strategies through regular staff meetings and through attendance and participation at professional conferences. They represent a range of majors and minors. Graduate tutors are available to the graduate student community for appointments and will occasionally take undergraduate overflow. They also provide guidance to the undergraduate tutors.
In the beginning, the tutor will want some information about you, about what you're working on, and about what your goals are for your writing. The session is based on what you tell us you'd like to work on, so you should expect to be an active participant in the work that gets done. The tutor will not simply take over your paper and rewrite it or edit it for you. Instead, she or he will help you to strengthen, clarify, and revise your own ideas.
Bring anything you would normally have if you were working on this paper in your room or in the library: a copy of the assignment; a copy of the syllabus; books, articles, or other source material. Bring along any writing that you've done: ideas, notes, a printed or electronic copy of your essay.
Not necessarily. You can take a chance and simply drop by. If a tutor has no scheduled appointments, then you're in luck! Appointments are scheduled on the hour, however, so try to come by as early in the hour as you can.
We are pleased when writers find the Writing Center helpful. Because the number of tutors available is limited, we ask that you schedule no more than one session a day.
All tutors are selected from the ENGL 290 course entitled Writing and Responding. The course is offered once a year, usually in the spring. Students from that course begin tutoring in the fall. It is a paid position.
To be signed in to the course, you need to talk with Prof. Boquet, by phone, ext. 2248 or e-mail. She'll be happy to talk to you more about tutoring in the Writing Center!
All of the centers are located in the Academic Commons which is on the first floor of the DiMenna-Nyselius Library.
Fairfield’s Math Center offers drop-in tutoring during our designated hours or one-on-one tutoring that can be scheduled with a tutor by appointment.
The Science Center offers expanded tutoring sessions, led by other students, in all for the foundational natural science courses.
The Math Center offers support in the first-year core math classes, which include Precalculus, Calculus, and Statistics.
The Science Center tutoring schedule changes each semester. Check here for the center’s most up-to-date schedule.