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Friend, Christy – JAC: A Journal of Composition Theory, 1999
Notes that the most pressing question occupying scholars in rhetoric and composition involves defining the relationship between the writing classroom and public discourse. Claims I. Young's notion of the ideal city, developed in her 1990 book "Justice and the Politics of Difference," can serve as a model to help theorize the connections…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Rhetorical Theory, Teaching Models, Writing (Composition)
Root, Robert L., Jr. – 1979
Two opposing views of composition instruction--one emphasizing the creativity and self-involvement of the student (or producer), and one emphasizing the communication produced (the product)--can be reconciled through a perspective that emphasizes the process of composition. It is in process, defined as "the act of composing" or "the act of…
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Secondary Education, Teacher Attitudes, Teaching Methods
Ede, Lisa S. – 1979
Empirical and theoretical research and a teacher's own writing experience provide equally valuable resources in the composition classroom. Current research on the composing process suggests a conceptual change from that of a rigid sequence of clearly demarcated stages to a more recursive, hierarchically structured model. Until recently, the role…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Higher Education, Role Models, Student Writing Models
Jacobs, Suzanne E. – 1986
Effective writing assessment involves judging how well a writer is encouraged by the classroom's social context to pull together ideas and to bring experience to bear on abstractions. Four main points can be made to justify this view. First, assessment by standardized test determines a teach-and-test model of instruction. But a curriculum that…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Holistic Approach, Standardized Tests, Teaching Models
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
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Matthewman, Sasha; Triggs, Pat – Computers and Education, 2004
Writing with the computer provokes and enables pupils to engage with aspects of multimodal design [Multiliteracies: Literacy Learning and the Design of Social Futures, Routledge, London, 2000]. At the same time the traditional stages of the writing process become much more fluid and integrated [Aust. J. Language Literacy 17(3) (1994) 183]. These…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Computer Uses in Education, Writing Processes, Teaching Models
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Devine, Thomas G. – Journal of Developmental Education, 1990
Warns against a complete reliance on the "writing process approach" in writing instruction, stressing that not all writers rely on rewriting and revision and that emphasis on group response does not necessarily lead to effective writing. Argues that the process approach discourages modeling and the use of well-known rhetorical patterns. (DMM)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Process Approach (Writing), Remedial Instruction, Teaching Methods
Trivisonno, Ann – 1987
The "problem-posing" education model of Paulo Freire takes as its departure point the life experience of the learner, rather than the teacher's knowledge. Ursuline College (Cleveland, Ohio) created several courses for returning adult students that were based on Freire's ideas. One course called "Humanities Focus on Life" is for…
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Adult Students, Communication Skills, Continuing Education
Fortune, Ron – ADE Bulletin, 1987
Focuses on the need for improved teaching at the secondary and college levels of the English curriculum, emphasizing the view of learning that also includes the development of thinking abilities capable of helping students use information to create their own insights. Reviews recent pedagogical guides that follow this approach. (NKA)
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, English Instruction, English Literature, English Teacher Education
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English Journal, 1987
Considers: (1) research by George Hillocks using meta-analysis to examine four modes of composition instruction; (2) role playing in classroom to improve student writing of persuasive letters or opinion essays; (3) process approach to English instruction, which allows for complex nature of individual learning styles; and (4) resource for promising…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Classroom Communication, Classroom Environment, Cognitive Style