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Conely, James – 1992
Since students enter college with a basic knowledge of the mechanics of writing, including grammar, spelling, and punctuation, most student writing mistakes amount to a failure to see what they have actually written. Thus, instructors must help students to apply knowledge they already have and to see their own errors through careful proofreading.…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Error Correction, Higher Education, Peer Evaluation
Haist, Caroline – 2000
This paper addresses the question of how grammar checkers may help or hinder students by analyzing the performance of the Microsoft Word 97's Grammar Checker at flagging and explaining errors frequently made by college students. Thousands of sentences were fed into the program. Results indicate that it caught some of the errors reliably (e.g.…
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Error Correction, Grammar, Higher Education

Hayden, Paul T. – Journal of Legal Education, 1990
Telling law students that their response to a question is wrong will cause them to view the parameters of acceptable discourse more narrowly and, more insidiously, make the classroom an environment in which comments not made within the parameters of reported cases and accepted secondary sources are rejected without exploration. (MSE)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Error Correction, Higher Education, Legal Education (Professions)

Drake, Lon – Journal of College Science Teaching, 1993
Explains that trial and error learning is an important way for children and adults to learn. Open-ended activities have great opportunities for error and eventual feedback for error reduction. (PR)
Descriptors: College Science, Error Correction, Feedback, Higher Education
MacDonald, Ross B. – Review of Research in Developmental Education, 1991
Drawing from a review of the literature on feedback in two fields, English education and social psychology, this paper sets forth a set of theoretical conclusions and practical suggestions for developmental English instructors and others to use in providing feedback to composition students. First, the research on written feedback in English…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Educational Research, Error Correction, Feedback

Whiting, Wallace B. – Chemical Engineering Education, 1991
Honest errors appearing in textbooks, articles, and instructor-generated assignments are used as meaningful vehicles of instruction. Missing information, corrected printing errors, deliberate errors, and difficult written passages are discussed as sources of errors. How to use errors in assignments, classroom examples, examination questions, and…
Descriptors: Chemistry, College Science, Engineering Education, Error Correction
Hartnett, Carolyn G. – Composition Chronicle: Newsletter for Writing Teachers, 1997
When it comes to teaching students how to correct errors in mechanics and usage, English composition teachers have a problem in determining what and how to teach. An approach is developing overseas which comes from a type of linguistics called "functional," because it describes how languages work rather than only its forms. A branch that…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Cultural Context, English Instruction, Error Correction

Sweedler-Brown, Carol O. – Journal of Second Language Writing, 1993
A study compared the influences of rhetorical and sentence-level features on holistic essay scores assigned by raters who are experienced writing instructors but not trained in English-as-a-Second-Language (ESL) instruction. In scoring six university-level essays, these raters placed emphasis on ESL sentence-level errors far more than on essays'…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, English (Second Language), Error Correction, Essays
Topping, Keith – 2000
This booklet examines principles for effective tutoring. An introduction defines tutoring. Ten sections present research findings and practical applications. Section 1, "Real-Life Goals," includes making consistent, regular time; targeting real- life goals; and exploring understanding. Section 2, "Question and Prompt,"…
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Elementary Secondary Education, Error Correction, Feedback

O'Keefe, Robert D. – College Teaching, 1996
A coding system expediting grading of student reports in a marketing class is described. The system uses twelve codes corresponding to constructive criticisms of content and form, allowing the teacher to comment while reading and to read more efficiently. A brief summary can also be included. Most frequent codes are recorded in the gradebook to…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Classroom Communication, College Instruction, Editing

Suozzo, Andrew – French Review, 1995
An electronic mail project designed to create personal dialogue between native speakers and college students in a modern French civilization course is described. It was found that French participants added nuance to generalizations about their culture and brought understanding to certain historical events occurring during the course. Linguistic…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Cultural Education, Dialogs (Language), Electronic Mail
Arani, Mhmoud T. – 1993
The purpose of this study was to: (1) describe differences in performance by non-native learners of English, when writing in different genres; (2) determine communicative value of grammatical errors as judged by a panel of native speakers; and (3) demonstrate inconsistencies in native speaker judgment of error gravity. Subjects were 20…
Descriptors: College Students, English (Second Language), Error Analysis (Language), Error Correction

Meyer, Debra K. – College Teaching, 1993
A discussion of misunderstandings occurring in the college classroom looks at the common sources of misconceptions and offers three ways to diagnose and address them: (1) asking students to think aloud as they solve problems; (2) having students teach course topics; and (3) reviewing students' notes with them. (MSE)
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Classroom Techniques, College Faculty, College Instruction

Murie, Robin – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1997
Techniques for helping college-level non-native English speaking students understand the process of editing include individual and small-group conferencing, peer editing, and follow-up on errors. Teachers should give students the pencil, have them read the draft aloud, look for patterns of both good and erroneous usage, and focus on the positive.…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Students, Editing, English (Second Language)

Holt, Sheryl L. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1997
Offers suggestions for the college teacher with limited opportunity for individual writing conferences with non-native English-speaking students: tolerating some more complex errors; focusing on content; soliciting student ideas for correction; addressing only one or two error types; providing vocabulary choices; and highlighting correct usage.…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, English (Second Language), Error Correction
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