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Beeghly, Dena G.; Reese, Susan Jacques – 1996
Academic Development Program students face a special challenge. Within a few short weeks, they must hone their reading, writing, and speaking skills while scrambling to adjust to life in college. Usually, pre-freshmen enrolled in the Academic Development Program are not familiar with the demands of academic reading, writing, and oral response. For…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, College Preparation, Developmental Studies Programs, Higher Education
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Swiderek, Bobbi – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 1995
Offers a humorous account of a writing assignment in which seventh-grade students, in response to a detailed description of a living room, wrote descriptions of who lived there, much to the chagrin of their teacher, whose living room it was. (SR)
Descriptors: Grade 7, Secondary Education, Self Concept, Student Attitudes
Burmester, Beth – 1997
One composition instructor's purpose is to address, or perhaps, re-dress, the balance of the relationship between teacher and student using a dialogic framework that provides for reciprocity. Her aim is to provoke, to seduce (persuade through passion), and to awaken their incipient sense of wonder at the world and the language that creates this…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Higher Education, Language Role, Power Structure
Wood, Robin – 1997
In the struggle to find an acceptably academic voice that still felt personal, an instructor started thinking about what it would mean to say that academic writing is always autobiographical. Reading student work for how the autobiographical is presented in academic discourse, the instructor thought about how autobiographical writing could be used…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Autobiographies, Higher Education, Personal Narratives
Sosnoski, James J.; Downing, David B. – Pre-Text: A Journal of Rhetorical Theory, 1993
Presents (in an unconventional, diary-like format) the comments of two writing instructors regarding the first author's attempt to revamp a writing course. Reflects on the current state of theoretical worry about teaching writing in a way that puts the authors in conversation with other writing teachers. (RS)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Higher Education, Multicultural Education, Student Reaction
Ross, Jeffrey; Faucette, Dixon – 1994
During the 1994 fall semester, an instructor taught an English 101 section at Central Arizona College-Superstition Mountain Campus that used readings from Graham Flegg's "Numbers: Their History and Meaning" as the basis for 3 of the assigned readings. Only 3 of the 5 assigned essays were based on math--as opposed to all of them--for…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Content Area Writing, Freshman Composition, Group Dynamics
Perry, Patricia H. – 1995
Through three semesters of teaching the nonfiction essay, an instructor has come to terms with the fact that she has yet to attempt the type of personal essay that she asks her students to write, essays in which personal experiences with death are shared. However, a reminiscence on death through a recounting of her reactions to and understanding…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Autobiographies, Creative Writing, Death
McClure, Michael – 1993
Allowing, or encouraging, students to write fiction has not received much attention from college composition teachers, despite recent attempts to bridge the gaps between composition and the study of literature. Based on experiences with a number of students in a variety of writing courses, a college composition instructor questions assumptions…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Creative Writing, Fiction, Freshman Composition
Reiss, Donna – 1995
The letter format, whether on paper or on computers, fosters student collaboration and a virtual community. Letters have real audiences, even when those audiences are fictional, as in epistolary novels and imaginative writing assignments. Most adult, non-traditional students (such as those at Tidewater Community College in Virginia) know that…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Computer Uses in Education, Electronic Mail, Higher Education
Weeden, Scott R. – 1996
According to author David Roochnik, the "tragedy of logos" refers to the condition of having a "logos" (meaning a view of the rational structure of the world) and colliding with its limits and limitations. The tragedy of logos arises when some event or experience shows that things are otherwise, because tragedy entails the…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Mediated Communication, Computer Networks
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Donlan, Dan – English Journal, 1986
Presents "fail-safe" lessons for emergencies and substitutes. Describes an experimental design with six steps, designed to help teachers teach students some things about themselves, such as whether boys are better spellers than girls. Offers other examples from the classroom. (EL)
Descriptors: Assignments, Class Activities, English Instruction, Learning Activities
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Nelson, Jennie – Composition Studies/Freshman English News, 1994
Describes the contending rhetorics of two basic objectives for assigning students the task of writing research papers. Considers the assigning of research papers a problematic exercise. Provides student responses concerning their conceptions of research writing. Considers what teachers might do to change student perception of research assignments.…
Descriptors: College English, English Instruction, Higher Education, Instructional Improvement
Phillips, Cassandra – 2002
The instructor/author first started to think about the relationship between time and literacy when she was writing her dissertation and doing a study in a first-year composition course at a community college in Chicago. She realized that many teachers at community colleges think about the issue of time, as they realize it is something their…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Classroom Techniques, Community Colleges, Literacy
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Quinn, Josephine – Innovations in Education and Teaching International, 2003
Presents an example of a completed Patchwork Text assignment written by one of the students in a course for primary school student teachers becoming specialists in science. Writing examples are provided under these main topics: What is Science?; Science and Society; Science and the Media; Science and Religion; and Science and Stereotypes. (AEF)
Descriptors: Assignments, Cooperative Learning, Course Content, Instructional Innovation
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Romano, Tom – English Education, 1998
Describes the ramifications of a writing assignment for preservice teachers about their relationships with literature. Reports on several of the students' personal writings in response to the assignment. Presents responses of two teachers, Greg Hamilton and Deborah Kinder, about doing personal writing assignments. (PA)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Critical Reading, Higher Education, Literature Appreciation
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