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Scheckels, Theodore F., Jr. – College Composition and Communication, 1983
Examines three strategies by which competitive debaters generate and organize their affirmative cases. Discusses how the persuasive writer can use these same three strategies as heuristics for deliberative discourse and as models for its organization. (HTH)
Descriptors: Competition, Debate, Higher Education, Models
Frye, Bob J. – Freshman English News, 1986
Discusses how junk mail letters can be used to teach students about rhetorical choices and the process of writing. (SRT)
Descriptors: Audience Analysis, Higher Education, Learning Activities, Letters (Correspondence)
Gould, Eric; And Others – 1989
Designed to involve students directly and immediately in the process of intellectual inquiry by showing them that writing is a discovery process and by helping them in developing writing as a form of social dialogue, this book is organized to accentuate the dynamic, interactive character of the writing process. Chapter titles are: (1)…
Descriptors: Dialogs (Literary), Higher Education, Persuasive Discourse, Reading Writing Relationship
Texas Education Agency, Austin. – 1991
This handbook is one of a series developed by the Texas Education Agency in response to requests to provide schools with additional information concerning the written composition portion of the Texas Assessment of Academic Skills (TAAS). The handbook focuses on exit level grades 9 through 12. Following an introduction, the handbook is in two…
Descriptors: High Schools, Persuasive Discourse, Process Approach (Writing), State Standards
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Brueggeman, Martha A. – Journal of Reading, 1986
Describes a teaching method for reading and writing instruction to be used with college developmental reading students that involves writing reactions to editorials in the campus newspaper. (SRT)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Learning Activities, Peer Evaluation, Peer Teaching
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Sinatra, Richard – English Quarterly, 1983
Explains four visual composition preparations providing both concrete experiences to stimulate student writing and a nonverbal means of teaching the internal structure of discourse. (MM)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Expository Writing, Higher Education
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Sedlacek, Gary C. – English Journal, 1987
Reviews the major elements of short fiction to suggest the primacy of voice in creative writing, and recommends approaches for helping students develop voice in their writing. (NKA)
Descriptors: Creative Writing, English Instruction, Fiction, Language Styles
Department for Education and Skills, London (England). – 2001
Second in a series of booklets designed to assist Year 6 teachers with planning instruction to meet objectives of the National Literacy Strategy, this booklet reproduces the medium-term planning for the Autumn and Spring Terms 2001-2002 and contains detailed planning for a further Autumn Term unit (report Writing) and two for the Spring Term…
Descriptors: British National Curriculum, Grade 6, Intermediate Grades, Lesson Plans
Fenton, Mary C. – 1983
The synthesis of four instructional models for argumentative writing--the Toulmin, Hiduke, Winder, and Crebbe-Debate approaches--with basic discourse theory produces a practical and positive method of teaching college students to write effective persuasive essays. A battery of questions based on a modified communication triangle--subject…
Descriptors: College English, Essays, Expository Writing, Higher Education
National Endowment for the Humanities (NFAH), Washington, DC. – 2001
A list of grievances comprises the longest portion of the Declaration of Independence, but the source of the document's power is its firm philosophic foundation. In this unit, the teacher can capitalize on the propensity to complain to increase student awareness of the precedents behind the Declaration of Independence. The unit can help students…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Classroom Techniques, Curriculum Enrichment, Learning Activities
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Karras, Ray W. – OAH Magazine of History, 1996
Outlines a step-by-step process through which students can construct, defend, and test historical arguments. These include to support the claim with facts and analyze their relevance, to oppose the claim with additional facts, to rebut this claim with additional facts, and to ask for new information to test the claim. (MJP)
Descriptors: Credibility, Educational Strategies, Historiography, History
Rosenberg, Ruth – 1987
Because graduating high school seniors and college freshmen have difficulty writing persuasive arguments, elementary and secondary school writing curricula must teach students how to create a persuasive argument by producing evidence or support for their claims. One strategy for teaching persuasive writing that has proven to be successful is a…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Models, Outlining (Discourse), Persuasive Discourse
Minnesota State Dept. of Children, Families, and Learning, St. Paul. – 1998
Developed by classroom teachers during the development phase of Minnesota's Graduation Standards, this performance package is made up of locally designed assignments that, taken together, show whether a student has learned and can apply the knowledge and skills related to writing for a variety of academic and technical purposes, situations, and…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Class Activities, Editorials, Essays
Braungart, Diane S. – 1985
Noting that effective writing instruction depends on careful planning informed by knowledge of the writing process and its variations in relation to different audiences and purposes, this teacher's guide explains the nature of the writing process and how it relates to instruction. The purposes of the guide are threefold: to highlight current…
Descriptors: Descriptive Writing, Elementary Secondary Education, Expository Writing, Language Usage
McCleary, William J. – 1983
The case approach to academic writing requires a student to use subjects in an active way while writing. This approach, appropriate in content courses as well as in composition classes, improves a writer's logic more quickly and effectively than concentrating on logic alone. In the case approach, a student is given a body of information about a…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Content Area Writing, Critical Thinking, Deduction
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