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Vanessa Sullivan – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2025
This article presents the findings of a study in which college freshman reflected on the process of writing a literacy narrative and considered the impact of such writing on their narrative identities. The author synthesizes existing scholarship on literacy narratives, discusses the methodology of interpretive phenomenological analysis utilized,…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Story Telling, Literacy, Self Concept
Beam, Emily A. – Journal of Economic Education, 2021
The author of this article describes an intermediate economics course structured around outside readings, which include academic journal papers, policy briefs, and news articles. Students complete low-stakes, high-frequency writing assignments that promote accountability and encourage critical thinking about the readings. This pairing of outside…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Economic Development, Reading Assignments, Reading Materials
Tye G. Campbell; Tracey Hodges; Sheunghyun Yeo; Erin Rich; Kaleigh Pate – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2025
Despite research demonstrating positive effects of writing on student achievement, writing-to-learn remains under-utilised in mathematics and mathematics teacher education. In this paper, we explore how writing-to-learn tasks in a mathematics methods course influenced elementary preservice teachers' beliefs about teaching in two domains:…
Descriptors: Mathematics Teachers, Preservice Teachers, Mathematics Instruction, Content Area Writing
Miriam Jaffe; Erin Kelly; Alicia Williams; Alanna Beroiza; Mark DiGiacomo; Madhav Kafle – Teaching in Higher Education, 2024
Graduate students writing on their own often struggle with knowledge production and identity conflicts. Conversely, writing with others presents its own set of challenges, as collaborators struggle to define roles and expectations. To systematically foster and teach collaborative writing practices for graduate students, we performed a self study…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Collaborative Writing, Communities of Practice, Socialization
Cserni, Robert T.; Rademacher, Heidi E. – College Teaching, 2021
Studies show only 20 to 40 percent of students read assigned texts and are prepared for class discussions. To address this issue we created the "3-2-1 Reading Assignment," in which students engage in critical reading and deep learning by providing "three" points that summarize the text, "two" points that analyze it,…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Reading Assignments, Compliance (Psychology), Critical Thinking
Samuel M. Clevenger; Jaime R. DeLuca – Sport Management Education Journal, 2024
Journaling assignments are generative practices for the sport management classroom because they can help students process course content through self-reflection and relate their acquired knowledge to their experiences and worldviews. This essay presents journaling as an example of contemplative pedagogy, an educational technique that supports the…
Descriptors: Student Journals, Athletics, Business Administration Education, Reflection
Yongyan Li – Journal of Education and Learning, 2024
Master-level postgraduate professional development (PPD) programs have grown rapidly in many parts of the world. Being able to complete written assignments successfully is a significant concern for students pursuing PPD studies. Yet the nature of written assignments in such programs has been under-researched. This paper reports a study conducted…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Masters Programs, Graduate Study, Professional Development
Nuzzo, James L. – Advances in Physiology Education, 2023
Letters to the editor are an important part of democratic societies. In academic journals, letters serve as a form of postpublication review and thus permit continued discussion and debate of scientific ideas. However, letters and their importance are rarely taught to university students. Therefore, the aim of the present paper is to propose a…
Descriptors: Letters (Correspondence), Writing Assignments, Exercise Physiology, College Students
Benjamin M. Torsney; Sarah Rawls; Joseph I. Eisman; Catherine Pressimone Beckowski; Cheryl B. Torsney – Educational and Developmental Psychologist, 2025
Objective: The objective of this study was threefold: (a) to create a rubric for response complexity (RC), defined as an admixture of response length, grammatical diversity, categorisation, and sophistication; (b) to measure behavioural and cognitive engagement through students' written responses on a school-based written activity, and (c) to…
Descriptors: College Students, Learner Engagement, Responses, Difficulty Level
Kong Chen; April C. Tallant; Ian Selig – Information and Learning Sciences, 2025
Purpose: Current knowledge and research on students' utilization and interaction with generative artificial intelligence (AI) tools in their academic work is limited. This study aims to investigate students' engagement with these tools. Design/methodology/approach: This research used survey-based research to investigate generative AI literacy…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Higher Education, College Students, Technology Integration
Ernesto Panadero; Pablo Delgado; Lucía Barrenetxea-Mínguez; David Zamorano; Leire Pinedo; Alazne Fernández-Ortube – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2025
The students' dominant language might influence how they use and process a rubric and its subsequent effect on task performance. However, our knowledge about these effects is limited. This study investigates how the dominant language of students is associated with their rubric reading patterns and their task performance in a written landscape…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Spanish Speaking, Language Dominance
López, Sylvia – Hispania, 2023
Employing a modified version of an exhibit template for course integration (Beckman 2012), Sylvia López designed museum projects for an elective Spanish course on health that is open to students at the high-intermediate level and above. The course's aims are manifold: to build students' vocabulary, to discuss cultural aspects affecting health, and…
Descriptors: Females, Hispanic American Students, Bilingualism, Museums
Ghoshal, Raj A. – Teaching Sociology, 2023
This teaching note presents an assignment in which students write an op-ed on a course-related issue and submit it to a newspaper. I argue that an op-ed assignment dovetails with pedagogical goals around democratic citizenship and public sociology. I explain the project's objectives, instructions, and timeline. I present evidence from three…
Descriptors: Citizen Participation, Opinions, Writing Assignments, Newspapers
Oganessian, Armen – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2023
This paper addresses a surprising phenomenon in the evangelical theological classroom. Evangelical theological students often approach theology as an exclusively analytic subject, failing to use imaginative criteria in "doing theology." Specifically, they fail to use their literary imaginations or what some call narrative imagination.…
Descriptors: Christianity, Theological Education, Imagination, Student Attitudes
James W. Drisko – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2025
The rise of AI generated texts offers promise but creates new challenges for social work teaching. A recent survey found that 89% of higher education students used AI on their homework. AI generated text may be difficult to distinguish from a student's own work, yet are being submitted as the student's own work. This poses new challenges to…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, Social Work, Counselor Training, Artificial Intelligence