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Whittier, Gayle – Clearing House, 1995
Suggests that, despite the expanding variety of the university population, despite diversity and challenges to the literary canon, writing assignments continue to be uninspired and outdated. Describes an "Alternative Responses to Literature" course whose aim was to open up the communal readings, the forms of response to them, and the…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, College English, Course Descriptions, Higher Education
Ediger, Marlow – 1992
Writing is a fundamental skill for students to develop. A learning environment should be in evidence which assists students to achieve more optimally in writing. Writing activities should be interesting, purposeful, meaningful, and provide for individual differences. Students need stimulating learning opportunities involving a variety of purposes…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Classroom Environment, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education
Amy, Lori E. – 2002
The literature of the contact zone has done an excellent job of elucidating the ethical demands of the classroom as a hybrid space of variously raced, classed, and gendered subjects discursively engaging across multiple identity boundaries. But a chief concern of one writing teacher is whether and how writing teachers can revise the symbol systems…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Cultural Context, Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness
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Lyon, Arabella – Rhetoric Review, 1992
Demonstrates the prevalence of the problem of educators consensual, conventional characterization of language. Suggests an alternative, more dynamic way to describe social groups, and shows how this alternative can be used in the writing classroom. (PRA)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Higher Education, Rhetorical Theory, Teaching Methods
Groppe, John D. – 1995
The academic setting for many students is frightening, but it is especially so for students with a strong religious background. For such students, the academic atmosphere is, at best, not neutral but empty of teachers and classes that would encourage them to deepen their religious resources. In a "Point of View" essay in the "Chronicle of Higher…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Higher Education, Religion, Religious Factors
McAllister, Elizabeth – 1990
The reading and writing abilities of children work together from the inception of thought to produce literacy. Children can read and write for learning and enjoyment. Each activity enhances the other's development at all levels, thus, writing should not be held back until reading is accomplished at a set level. Children come to school rich in…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Critical Reading, Cues, Elementary Education
McLeod, Susan H. – 1997
The most used model for empirical research on the writing process is based on cognitive psychology and does not take into account affective phenomena, although it has long been recognized that affect (that is, the noncognitive aspects of mental activity) plays a large role in writing and learning to write. To understand the complete picture, it is…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Cognitive Psychology, Higher Education, Humanistic Education
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Burns, Thomas – Social Studies Journal, 1992
Suggests that those teaching "basic" social studies should establish a climate of success for students, who often suffer from low self-esteem. Recommends organized, brief, concise daily lessons, consistent routines, and frequent opportunities for student writing. Explains a Model Student Program in which the reading teacher acts as a…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Classroom Environment, Role Models, Secondary Education
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Morton, Deborah Balzhiser – English in Texas, 1994
Argues that, when instructors consider only the socially constructed in their classrooms, the intricacies of individuals are lost. Points out that, when teachers think students are completing assignments, the students are actually completing their own understanding of the assignment. Suggests that instructors explain repeatedly what they expect of…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Higher Education, Secondary Education, Student Attitudes
Tinberg, Howard – 1991
Strange as it may seem, the classroom is not, by and large, accepted within the composition discipline as a scene for genuine knowledge-making and theory-building. Teachers should go back to the "concrete materials" from which knowledge and theory are made. An example of what can be learned in the classroom comes from an effort to…
Descriptors: Anthropology, Classroom Environment, Classroom Research, Classroom Techniques