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Guzy, Annmarie – Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, 2014
Annmarie Guzy teaches honors composition at the University of South Alabama. This essay discusses her observation that students who took her class were more likely to complete the honors program, which led to her wondering what elements of her course might give students an edge in honors program completion. As an English professor with training in…
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, Freshman Composition, Academic Persistence, Writing Assignments
Campbell, Kimberly Hill – Educational Leadership, 2014
Although using the five-paragraph formula to teach essay writing is a ubiquitous practice--and many K-12 teachers defend it--Campbell argues that having students write according to this formula does more harm than good. The formula's tight structure stops the very critical thinking students need to do to strengthen their cognition and their…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction, Elementary School Teachers, Secondary School Teachers
Smith, Andrew C. – English Journal, 2010
Most every writing teacher can relate to the curse of reading yet another incoherent essay, the contents of which resemble an unorganized junk drawer of thoughts. Such essays cry out for a main idea. The remedy is a thesis, and teachers rightly take pains to help students discover this. Yet in spite of this, writing teachers ought to bear in mind…
Descriptors: Writing Teachers, Writing Instruction, Essays, Speeches
Holiday, Judy – Composition Forum, 2010
In this interview Susan Jarratt reviews the trajectory of her scholarship and revisits some of the lessons learned from a variety of her projects while simultaneously drawing out historical and narrative continuities of seemingly disparate time periods and contexts. In doing so, she elucidates the value of scholarship as a political and…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Interviews, College Faculty, Biographies
Wolfe, Joanna – College Composition and Communication, 2010
Contemporary argument increasingly relies on quantitative information and reasoning, yet our profession neglects to view these means of persuasion as central to rhetorical arts. Such omission ironically serves to privilege quantitative arguments as above "mere rhetoric." Changes are needed to our textbooks, writing assignments, and instructor…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Rhetoric, Student Attitudes, Textbooks
Davies, W. Martin – Teaching in Higher Education, 2008
This paper looks at the need for a better understanding of the impediments to critical thinking in relation to graduate student work. The paper argues that a distinction is needed between two vectors that influence student writing: (1) the word-level-sentence-level vector; and (2) the grammar-inferencing vector. It is suggested that much of the…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Educational Practices, Inferences, Grammar
Parks, Steve; Pollard, Nick – College Composition and Communication, 2010
We argue that the Federation of Worker Writers and Community Publishers, with its dual emphasis on literacy and occupational skills, can serve as a new model for writing classrooms and writing program administrators. We further contend that the "contact zone" classroom should be replaced with community-based "federations."…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Rhetoric, Cooperation, Employees
Simmons, John S. – High School Journal, 2009
The demand that public school students, especially at the high school level, write under time pressure has been the subject of debate for at least the last seventy-five years. As state after state has added timed writing component to its testing apparatus in recent years, the debate has intensified. Those teachers who are alumni of the National…
Descriptors: High School Students, Writing Processes, Essay Tests, Timed Tests
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
College Composition and Communication, 2007
This article presents several excerpts from an article written by Joseph Janangelo titled "Joseph Cornell and the Artistry of Composing Persuasive Hypertexts." In his article, Janangelo suggested that Cornell's work and ideas about composing model intelligent ways to composing persuasive nonsequential text. Janangelo also wondered if the use of…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Writing Instruction, Hypermedia, Persuasive Discourse

Welch, Kathleen E. – Rhetoric Society Quarterly, 1986
Offers a critique of C. H. Knoblauch and Lil Brannon's "Rhetorical Traditions and the Teaching of Writing" focusing on three language constructions that operate in the book: (1) dichotomy of the mechanical and organic, (2) use of assertions and evidence, and (3) the removal of Plato from any relationship with rhetoric except an…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Rhetoric, Rhetorical Criticism, Writing Instruction

Kaufer, David S.; Geisler, Cheryl – Journal of Advanced Composition, 1991
Represents a departure from the current trend against abstraction. Proposes a new formalism for the composition classroom. Argues that, when it comes to representing written arguments composed in response to multiple sources, existing schemes of argument are missing important abstractions about how authors use the arguments of others in the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Persuasive Discourse, Writing Instruction, Writing Processes
Walpole, Jane R. – 1981
Everything taught as rhetoric today can be traced to Aristotle, but his rhetoric needs to be updated. The five elements of his rhetoric--invention, arrangement, style, memory, and delivery--were designed for public orators, but rhetoric has since come to mean the written rather than the spoken word. Peter Ramus redefined rhetoric in the sixteenth…
Descriptors: Literary Styles, Persuasive Discourse, Public Speaking, Rhetoric
Vandenberg, Peter – 1993
"Frame alignment"--the conscious process of creating correspondence between one's own "frame" (ways of making meaning out circumstances) and someone else's--is a necessary condition for participation in organized social movements. Frame alignment processes may offer a generative and useful alternative to the reductive…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Higher Education, Persuasive Discourse, Writing (Composition)

Schroeder, Christopher – JAC: A Journal of Composition Theory, 1997
Critiques the logical revisionism of Stephen Toulmin, taking to task his "biased" assumptions about power and knowledge, among other limitations, while advancing his "simplified" system of discursive logic for the teaching of writing and rhetoric. (TB)
Descriptors: Bias, Higher Education, Logic, Persuasive Discourse