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Anna Riana Suryanti Tambunan; Sandi Ferdiansyah – Communication Teacher, 2025
This article discusses how intercultural communication learning can be enacted by engaging students in writing a visual essay mediated by social networking sites as an online platform. This article reports on the Cross-Cultural Understanding course, which explores how perspectives, people, practice, and products (4Ps) framing cultural diversity…
Descriptors: Intercultural Communication, Essays, Writing (Composition), Social Media
Cleophas, Catherine; Hönnige, Christoph; Meisel, Frank; Meyer, Philipp – INFORMS Transactions on Education, 2023
As the COVID-19 pandemic motivated a shift to virtual teaching, exams have increasingly moved online too. Detecting cheating through collusion is not easy when tech-savvy students take online exams at home and on their own devices. Such online at-home exams may tempt students to collude and share materials and answers. However, online exams'…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Cheating, Identification, Essay Tests
Michael D'Addario – Discover Education, 2025
With the proliferation of easy-to-use generative AI tools such as ChatGPT, students in college composition courses can and do take advantage of such technology to assist with essay writing. While a growing body of research does not see using these tools as a problem in itself, institutional, departmental, and instructor policies about generative…
Descriptors: Taxonomy, Language Usage, Artificial Intelligence, Computer Software
Williams, Michael R. – Journal of College Admission, 2021
As a practitioner who has scored many admission essays, the author has noticed that numerous colleges and universities include questions that seek to expose and evaluate students' interactions with diversity, equity, and inclusion. Frequently, applicants are encouraged to disclose a difficult moment in their life and share how they overcame it.…
Descriptors: African American Students, College Admission, Essays, College Applicants
Godsell, Sarah – South African Journal of Childhood Education, 2022
Background: The history essay, and historical writing, are crucial forms of assessment in History throughout primary and high school education. This article draws from an autoethnography of teachings in a pre-service history teachers' school classroom. This article discusses obstacles students experience in conceptualising and writing the history…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, History Instruction, Essays, Preservice Teachers
Ou Lydia Liu – Journal of Postsecondary Student Success, 2022
As U.S. higher education institutions adapt their admissions policies to advance diversity and inclusion, holistic admissions has taken a center stage in many institutions' admissions practices. This article provides an overview of the definition of holistic admissions, the differences between holistic admissions and other types of admissions,…
Descriptors: College Admission, Holistic Approach, Admission Criteria, Standardized Tests
Alexander, Patricia A.; Fusenig, Jannah; Schoute, Eric C.; Singh, Anisha; Sun, Yuting; van Meerten, Julianne E. – Written Communication, 2023
In this article, we share what we learned about undergraduates' struggles in writing quality summaries, comparison texts, and argumentative essays that were components of a unique course, Learning How to Learn. This course was designed to address core psychological issues that impede optimal learning for students from all majors, many of whom are…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Writing (Composition), Persuasive Discourse, Academic Language
Taylor, Robert S. – Theory and Research in Education, 2022
Writing a college-application essay has become a rite of passage for high-school seniors in the United States, one whose importance has expanded over time due to an increasingly competitive admissions process. Various commentators have noted the disturbing evolution of these essays over the years, with an ever-greater emphasis placed on obstacles…
Descriptors: Trauma, Victims, Essays, College Admission
Vick, Nicholas – Honors in Practice, 2021
The video essay is an opportunity for students to record their words and combine other visual elements to complete the typical requirements of a standard written paper. Applicable across disciplines and pedagogically aligned with an honors ethos of self-directed learning, video essays allow for individual and collaborative forms of expression…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Essays, Independent Study, Honors Curriculum
Clara Molina – Multilingua: Journal of Cross-Cultural and Interlanguage Communication, 2024
Language ideologies are a powerful way of perpetuating inequalities, as peripheralized speakers who have internalized the lack of legitimacy attributed to them often end up reproducing censure rather than resisting it. Foregrounding the affective dimension, this paper explores the role of shame as a fulcrum articulating the individual with the…
Descriptors: Social Bias, Language Variation, Language Attitudes, Intervention
Perrow, Margaret; Feldstein, Mary; Sieler, Arlene – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2020
Students who understand their writing process and see themselves as writers are more likely to successfully tackle unfamiliar genres and writing tasks. In this self-study, a college English professor and two first-year college students make a case for an extended-metaphor assignment that helps students build stronger identities as writers.…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), College Freshmen
Ursula Holzmann; Sulekha Anand; Alexander Y. Payumo – Advances in Physiology Education, 2025
Generative large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT can quickly produce informative essays on various topics. However, the information generated cannot be fully trusted, as artificial intelligence (AI) can make factual mistakes. This poses challenges for using such tools in college classrooms. To address this, an adaptable assignment called the…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Technology Uses in Education, Natural Language Processing, Thinking Skills
Michael Naughton – Critical Education, 2020
This article considers the growing crisis on a specific form of plagiarism in the UK where students purchase assignments from so called essay mills, which they then submit as their own work. It departs from the dominant discourses, however, to highlight the sociological context within which such student plagiarism, termed contract cheating, is…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Purchasing, Essays, Contracts
Bartholomae, David – Journal of Basic Writing, 2020
I retired from teaching in August, 2018. In the fall semester of that academic year, I taught a section of Basic Writing (now called "Workshop in Composition"), one of the courses I taught in the fall of 1975, my first year at the University of Pittsburgh. This essay is a documentary account of that course, including writing assignments…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Writing Assignments, College English, English Curriculum
Dobson, Ashley – Journal of College Admission, 2018
According to the Higher Education Research Institute, 35 percent of first-time freshmen applied to seven or more colleges during the Fall 2016 admission cycle. More than 80 percent of first-time freshmen apply to at least three colleges each year. But more applications mean more essays for students. And more colleges seem to be requiring unique…
Descriptors: Essays, College Applicants, College Admission, Anxiety