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Linhart, Jean Marie – PRIMUS, 2014
Writing and communication are essential skills for success in the workplace or in graduate school, yet writing and communication are often the last thing that instructors think about incorporating into a mathematics course. A mathematical modeling course provides a natural environment for writing assignments. This article is an analysis of the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Mathematical Models, Mathematics Instruction, Writing Instruction
Gebhardt, Richard – Writing Instructor, 2011
"Process and Intention: A Bridge from Theory to Classroom" is rooted in a time when intuitive, experience-based awareness that we should "Teach Writing as a Process Not Product" (Murray 3) was bolstered by systematic research into the complexity of writing. Lots of years have passed since those days, so as a reminder, the author mentions five…
Descriptors: Intention, Writing Processes, Writing Instruction, Cognitive Processes
Barnard, Ian – College Composition and Communication, 2010
This essay interrogates the concept of "clarity" that has become an imperative of effective student writing. I show that clarity is neither axiomatic nor transparent, and that the clear/unclear binary that informs the identification of clarity as a goal of effective student writing is itself unstable precisely because of the ideological baggage…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Rhetoric, Student Writing Models, Jargon
Colomb, Gregory G. – College Composition and Communication, 2010
Central to the future of rhetoric and composition (or writing studies or whatever label we use) is the service mission of composition: to teach students to write. But that term "service" has not and will not serve us well. This essay examines the limitations and dangers of a service mission and explores a different model, that of a franchise, a…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Business Communication, Rhetorical Invention, Models
Moore, Cindy; O'Neill, Peggy; Huot, Brian – College Composition and Communication, 2009
As writing-program administrators and faculty are being called upon more frequently to help design and facilitate large-scale assessments, it becomes increasingly important for us to see assessment as integral to our work as academics. This article provides a framework, based on current historical, theoretical, and rhetorical knowledge, to help…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Administrators, Models, Teaching Methods
Haluska, Jan Charles – Academic Questions, 2007
In 1970, the author learned a simple step in making essays from his advisor. His advisor used a drawing of the Parthenon to illustrate the creation of a five-paragraph essay. It was obvious that his advisor was hesitant on teaching them a very simple concept of essay writing because it was pretty mechanical. Like his advisor, a lot of teachers…
Descriptors: Essays, Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), Models
Lynch, Paul – College Composition and Communication, 2009
This essay offers Neil Postman's thermostatic metaphor as a model for critical teaching. In this model, the role of the composition teacher is that of a thermostat that responds to a changing ideological environment by offering counterbalance. Such a stance is an anti-stance since it requires the teachers to enact philosophies and pedagogies,…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction, Teacher Role, Models
Salmani-Nodoushan, Mohammad Ali – Online Submission, 2007
The present paper underscores the importance of the cognitive orientation of English as a Foreign Language (EFL) students in their success in writing courses. A few suggestions are made as to how EFL teachers can put their students on the right cognitive path in their writings.
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Writing Skills, Writing Improvement, Cognitive Ability
Wilson, Anthony – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2007
The linguistic demands of poetry writing, quite apart from the transcriptional aspects of writing, make this perhaps the most challenging form of writing children encounter in school. These would include, among others, poetic techniques such as using line breaks and chunking meaning in stanzas; invention and handling of imagery; playfulness and…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Poetry, Writing Skills, Primary Education
Bloom, Lynn Z. – 1992
The process paradigm for teaching writing has been the dominant curricular model for the past 20 years, but by anatomizing various dimensions of this paradigm, it becomes clear why it, like any other paradigmatic model, will not last forever. To be adopted and become normative, any new paradigm has to appeal to salient features of the prevailing…
Descriptors: College English, Educational Trends, Higher Education, Models

Bazerman, Charles – College English, 1980
Reviews developments in composition in light of the current lack of attention to contexts for writing, proposes a conversational model for the interplay of reading and writing, and explores the implications of the model for teaching. (DD)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Models, Reading, Writing (Composition)

Wray, David – Reading Teacher, 1994
Argues that authorship, in the sense of creation and re-creation of meaning, should be a central focus in any model of literacy instruction. Examines the elements of the "traditional" model of literacy development. Discusses the place of text within that model. Discusses implications for classroom literacy instruction. (SR)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Literacy, Models, Reading Instruction
Cheng, An – Simulation & Gaming, 2007
Researchers have highlighted various benefits of the simulation-based approach to second language (L2) writing instruction. In this article, the author argues, with specific pedagogical scenarios, that an explicit focus on genre and genre analysis in simulation-based L2 writing instruction can further enhance learners' reading of content…
Descriptors: Writing Evaluation, Simulation, Second Language Instruction, Teaching Methods
Robillard, Amy E. – College English, 2006
The author argues that the new journal "Young Scholars in Writing: Undergraduate Research in Writing and Rhetoric" offers access to student writing outside of the pedagogical apparatus that has historically accompanied the publication of such writing, and in the process challenges composition's standard practice of citing students by first name…
Descriptors: Verbs, Nouns, Writing Instruction, Student Writing Models
Kiefer, Kate – 2002
Circa 1984 early practitioners in the composition field imagined a potential blossoming of early efforts in computers and writing that subsequent developments in the field have lost sight of. The expense of developing personal programs, the emergence of word processing software that incorporated many of the mechanical aspects of spelling and style…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Higher Education, Models, Writing Assignments