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Wilson, Amy Alexandra – Reading Teacher, 2008
Using a science lesson on lunar phases as a basis for discussion, the author suggests ways that teachers can provide literacy instruction on multimodal texts in science. The author asserts that multiple representations are central to the discipline of science, and that students require explicit instruction on how to critically read, evaluate, and…
Descriptors: Literacy, Content Area Reading, Content Area Writing, Scientific Literacy
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Weiner, Wendy F. – English Journal, 1986
Reviews how a sophomore class of gifted students selected a subject for their learning logs; tells how to write a learning log; offers ideas on evaluating learning logs; presents student reflections on the use of learning logs. (JK)
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Content Area Writing, Learning Activities, Learning Strategies
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Russell, David R. – English Journal, 1986
Presents the early history of writing across the curriculum (WAC) or "co-operation", as J. Hosic called it in 1913, concluding with a comparison of today's WAC programs with those of earlier decades. (SRT)
Descriptors: Content Area Writing, Educational Cooperation, Educational History, Higher Education
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Clarke, John H. – Journal of Reading, 1991
Notes that content area teachers recognize that visual organizers such as time lines, Venn diagrams, inductive towers, concept maps, causal chains, force fields, and flow charts help students recognize and take control of the intellectual processes which bring meaning to the study of academic content. (RS)
Descriptors: Content Area Reading, Content Area Writing, Graphic Organizers, Learning Strategies
Upton, James – 1986
Writing across the curriculum, or "writing-as-learning" (WAL), represents one of the most successful developments in writing instruction. WAL is an efficient teaching method for achieving educational goals in today's society because it effectively engages students in both the means and the ends of their education. Research has shown that…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Content Area Writing, Elementary Secondary Education, Integrated Activities
Gere, Anne Ruggles, Ed. – 1985
Written by teachers, the chapters in this book show how writing fosters learning in math, science, English, social studies, foreign language, philosophy, psychology, and art. Following an introduction by Anne Ruggles Gere, the first chapter, "Writing to Learn: The Nurse Log Classroom," by Steve Pearse, presents a comprehensive overview…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Content Area Writing, Education, Instruction
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Radencich, Marguerite C.; Schumm, Jeanne S. – Reading World, 1985
Provides parallel and flexible reading/writing strategies designed to help college students with the challenge of simultaneously succeeding in a variety of subject areas in which their experience is limited. (FL)
Descriptors: Content Area Reading, Content Area Writing, Higher Education, Integrated Activities
Ediger, Marlow – 2000
Language arts experiences integrate well with quality science lessons and units of study. For example, there are many opportunities for listening, speaking, reading, and writing activities in science. Ideas gleaned in science need to be communicated in diverse ways involving one or more senders and receivers of messages. Students may read about…
Descriptors: Content Area Reading, Content Area Writing, Elementary Education, Language Arts
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Gebhard, Ann O. – Journal of Reading, 1983
Discusses four principles derived from theory and practice that make incorporating writing into any class easy and worthwhile: (1) creating audience awareness, (2) making writing tasks consequential, (3) varying writing assignments, and (4) using writing to help students integrate new material into what they already. (FL)
Descriptors: Content Area Reading, Content Area Writing, Integrated Activities, Learning Strategies
Ediger, Marlow – 2000
In school, writing may be emphasized across the curriculum. There is a plethora of kinds of written work for students to be engaged in when studying science lessons and units. Poetry writing may be an excellent way for students to reveal what has been learned in a science unit. Many good poems dealing with science information are collected in…
Descriptors: Childrens Writing, Content Area Writing, Creative Writing, Elementary Education
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Konopak, Bonnie C.; And Others – Journal of Reading, 1987
Suggests using writing to enhance students' learning of content material because a positive environment that encourages writing allows students to explore, analyze, and synthesize what they are learning in a content classroom. Enumerates principles for facilitating comprehension and recommends using a guided writing procedure. (SKC)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Content Area Reading, Content Area Writing, Learning Strategies
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Lather, Patti – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 1998
The article to which this essay responds advises risky practices that trouble traditional distinctions between science and not-science (things not scientific in nature), particularly its argument to politicize science as a way to organize teaching. Raises questions about science as a regime of truth in a place where such questions carry much…
Descriptors: Consciousness Raising, Content Area Writing, Critical Theory, Educational Change
Weaver, Laura H. – 1985
Focusing on how expert writers in various disciplines convey complex ideas, this paper shows how the techniques used by the mathematician, Clark Kimberling, in various writings can (1) be transferred to other disciplines, (2) show learning taking place, and (3) provide models for students to re-enact learning in all subject areas. The paper…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Content Area Writing, Discovery Learning, Discovery Processes
Manning, Maryann; Manning, Gary – Teaching PreK-8, 1995
First in a series of columns on helping children develop content area literacy. Promotes the 3W3H strategy, a framework of "what" and "how" questions to help students approach content-area assignments. (ET)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Content Area Reading, Content Area Writing, Elementary Education
Shook, Ronald – 1982
The best way to teach writing is to make it the way to learn something else. Instructors need to look at written communication as it is used in real life. When students take pains with their writing, it is because what they have to say is important to them. The students' need to communicate a particular meaning for a particular purpose guides them…
Descriptors: Content Area Writing, Educational Strategies, Educational Theories, Language Processing
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