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Abigail Orenstein Ash – Composition Forum, 2024
This essay proposes a pedagogical approach to writing instruction in universities facing familiar institutional goals and barriers alongside the heightened emotional complexities of students post-pandemic. Students at these universities often pursue vocational paths, yet since spring 2020, their interpersonal and cultural challenges have deepened,…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods, Writing (Composition), College Students
Jung, Julie – College English, 2011
Scholars and teachers within the field of composition have long heralded the merits of reflective writing. Whether written intermittently throughout a course or near the end (typically in the genre of portfolio cover letter), reflective writing assignments are thought to promote cognitive development by helping students become more aware of their…
Descriptors: Writing Processes, Writing Instruction, Reflection, Writing Assignments
Reid, E. Shelley – College Composition and Communication, 2009
While writing pedagogy instructors assign their students a range of writing tasks, often as central or repeated features of the course, a crucial question has not yet been addressed: does it matter what new teachers write? If pedagogy students are being assigned writing in part to further develop their attitudes and practices related to teaching…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Writing Processes, Writing Teachers, Writing Instruction
Lynch-Biniek, Amy – CEA Forum, 2007
The author has been tutoring and teaching writing for fifteen years, but has discovered that few people outside of academia know what it is that she does. Despite the rise in composition graduate programs and the improving market for composition specialists, even within the university, faculty from other disciplines frequently have vague notions…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), Writing Teachers, Academic Discourse
Baecker, Diann – Composition Forum, 2007
There are not many English words for "anger." There's "wrath" and "ire," although no one uses "ire" anymore and hardly anyone "wrath." There's "frustration," "resentment," and "indignation," but they don't have the emotional intensity of "anger," a word that…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Writing Processes, Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response

Fleckenstein, Kristie S. – English Journal, 1992
Presents a conception of writing assignments as a navigation through five writing "events" that students experience through individually imposed writing tasks. Describes the five events within each assignment. Concludes with positive student evaluations. (HB)
Descriptors: High Schools, Higher Education, Writing Assignments, Writing Instruction
Rosenberg, Heidi D. – 2002
The issue of personal writing is hotly contested in composition studies. Some believe that personal writing has no place in academic writing. In a discussion with Peter Elbow regarding personal versus academic writing, David Bartholomae argues that "academic writing is the real work of the academy." Elbow, on the other hand, argues that…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Higher Education, Personal Writing, Writing Assignments

Slattery, Patrick F. – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1994
Discusses a literacy-enhancement program for undereducated university staff members tutored by college students taking a composition course on literacy. Focuses on the essays of one college student to illustrate how the sequence of writing assignments in the course fostered the reading and writing processes of academic literacy. (SR)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Higher Education, Illiteracy, Literacy

Matalene, Carolyn – Rhetoric Review, 1992
Argues that rationality follows rhetoric and emerges from discourse. Asserts that teachers must empower the students by starting with honest personal writing and move to honest personal writing about public issues. Presents samples of students' writing which illustrate the problems involved in trying to sound rational when arguing personal points.…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Personal Writing, Persuasive Discourse, Writing Assignments

Deming, Mary P.; Valeri-Gold, Maria – Reading Horizons, 1992
Discusses the use of computers in teaching basic writing to college students. Offers computer exercises and activities which foster a whole-language curriculum. (PRA)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Computers, Higher Education, Teaching Methods

McComiskey, Bruce – JAC: A Journal of Composition Theory, 1997
Proposes a turn toward "social-process rhetorical inquiry" in composition, a turn that requires further pedagogical adaptations of cultural studies methodologies in writing classrooms. Notes that the social-process heuristic is based on a cyclical model of writing processes, a model comprising cultural production, contextual…
Descriptors: Advertising, Class Activities, Critical Thinking, Higher Education
Roberts, Claudette – 1994
The degree to which process writing deconstructs traditional notions about a fixed final product came to the attention of a high school instructor and her students when they attempted to select their best "essays" for a contest the school was holding. The students in this class found that some of their best writing occurred not in their…
Descriptors: Essays, High Schools, Higher Education, Process Approach (Writing)

Frisch, Adam J. – Bulletin of the Association for Business Communication, 1991
Discusses the problem of asking students to write for the teacher, an authoritative, superior reader. Asserts that a better approach is to ask the students to first address their papers to a small group, and second to choose a specific value system to characterize the attitudes and beliefs of the group selected. (PRA)
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Business Communication, Business Education, Higher Education
Welsch, Kathleen A. – 1991
A close reading of two nineteenth-century composition textbook prefaces reveals that teachers of that period attempted to rename and refocus the content and practice of composition to meet the imagined needs of real students, who were also frustrated and struggling. From the perspective of a twentieth-century composition teacher, William Swinton's…
Descriptors: Educational History, Higher Education, Rhetorical Theory, Textbooks
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