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Roach-Freiman, Ashley – Communications in Information Literacy, 2021
BEAM is a schema for categorizing the rhetorical positions of authors according to the author's intention or purpose of the information. This Innovative Practices piece critiques common methods of teaching source evaluation and proposes that instruction librarians teach BEAM to students who may struggle using a source once they have located it. A…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Rhetoric, Authors, Information Sources
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Afrin, Tazin; Wang, Elaine; Litman, Diane; Matsumura, Lindsay C.; Correnti, Richard – Grantee Submission, 2020
Automated writing evaluation systems can improve students' writing insofar as students attend to the feedback provided and revise their essay drafts in ways aligned with such feedback. Existing research on revision of argumentative writing in such systems, however, has focused on the types of revisions students make (e.g., surface vs. content)…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Persuasive Discourse, Revision (Written Composition), Documentation
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Talanquer, Vicente – International Journal of Science Education, 2018
One of the central goals of modern science and chemistry education is to develop students' abilities to understand complex phenomena, and productively engage in explanation, justification, and argumentation. To accomplish this goal, we should better characterise the types of reasoning that we expect students to master in the different scientific…
Descriptors: Science Education, Chemistry, Science Process Skills, Abstract Reasoning
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Jensen, Jessica Lynn – Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 2018
Watching a debate can help people understand multiple points of view. At the conclusion of a debate, a consensus might occur after a deep analysis and discussion of the issues. Most students will participate in a class debate at some point in their schooling, but chances are that debate will not take place in math class. What could there be to…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Debate, Critical Thinking
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Sullivan, Paul – Dialogic Pedagogy, 2014
It appears that in September, 2011, Rome experienced much more than a dialogue on dialogic pedagogy but a gladiatorial clash of personalities and ideas. Heat, we are told, was generated (above, p.1) and in the dissipation of this heat on to the page, even the reader gets hot and flushed. We are told that arguments "fail" (above, p.16);…
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Teaching Methods, Epistemology, Persuasive Discourse
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Monroe, Carla R. – Educational Researcher, 2013
Although previous authors have offered persuasive arguments about the salience of race in the scholastic enterprise, colorism remains a relatively underexplored concept. This article augments considerations of social forces by exploring how color classifications within racial arrangements frame pathways for communities of color and, therefore,…
Descriptors: African American Community, Genetics, Ethnic Diversity, Racial Differences
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Lennard, John – Visible Language, 2011
This article offers two approaches to the question of "invisible punctuation," theoretical and critical. The first is a taxonomy of modes of punctuational invisibility, identifying "denial, repression, habituation, error" and "absence." Each is briefly discussed and some relations with technologies of reading are considered. The second considers…
Descriptors: Punctuation, Internet, Newspapers, Poetry
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Ferguson, Christopher J. – American Psychologist, 2013
In June 2011 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that video games enjoy full free speech protections and that the regulation of violent game sales to minors is unconstitutional. The Supreme Court also referred to psychological research on violent video games as "unpersuasive" and noted that such research contains many methodological flaws.…
Descriptors: Video Games, Violence, Court Litigation, Federal Courts
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Ross, Derek G. – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 2009
Phishing e-mails deceive individuals into giving out personal information which may then be utilized for identity theft. One particular type, the Personal Solicitation E-mail (PSE) mimics personal letters--modern perversions of "ars dictaminis" (the classical art of letter writing). In this article, I determine and discuss 19 appeals common to the…
Descriptors: Letters (Correspondence), Rhetoric, Rhetorical Criticism, Electronic Mail
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McLaren, Bruce M.; Scheuer, Oliver; Miksatko, Jan – International Journal of Artificial Intelligence in Education, 2010
An emerging trend in classrooms is the use of networked visual argumentation tools that allow students to discuss, debate, and argue with one another in a synchronous fashion about topics presented by a teacher. These tools are aimed at teaching students how to discuss and argue, important skills not often taught in traditional classrooms. But how…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Cooperative Learning, Computer Mediated Communication, Discussion (Teaching Technique)
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Eubanks, Philip; Schaeffer, John D. – College Composition and Communication, 2008
The phrase "academic bullshit" presents compositionists with a special dilemma. Because compositionists study, teach, and produce academic writing, they are open to the accusation that they both tolerate and perpetuate academic bullshit. We argue that confronting this problem must begin with a careful definition of "bullshit" and "academic…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Academic Discourse, Vocabulary Skills, High Achievement
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Moreale, Emanuela; Vargas-Vera, Maria – Educational Technology & Society, 2004
This paper outlines an e-Learning services architecture offering semantic-based services to students and tutors, in particular ways to browse and obtain information through web services. Services could include registration, authentication, tutoring systems, smart question answering for students' queries, automated marking systems and a student…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Persuasive Discourse, Semantics, Computer Uses in Education