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Maharaj, Nandini – Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies, Issues and Ideas, 2020
Writing skills are essential for students' academic and career development. Writing helps students to organize their thoughts and ideas. Students benefit not only from learning process-related strategies such as drafting and revising a paper, but also reflective strategies that can have an impact upon writing quality and productivity. In this…
Descriptors: Coaching (Performance), Writing Instruction, College Bound Students, High School Students
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Martorana, Christine – Composition Forum, 2016
The Real/Ideal Research Project is comprised of three components, ordered in purposeful succession, designed to emphasize the interconnectedness of emotion, reason, and action. In the first component, students compose a personal narrative focused on a specific inequity they (have) experience(d) or witnessed. Here, students are encouraged to…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Personal Narratives, Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response
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Graham, Steve – Educational Psychologist, 2018
This article presents a revised version of the writer(s)-within-community model of writing. Writing is conceptualized as a social activity situated within specific writing communities. Writing in these communities is accomplished by its members. The model proposes that writing is simultaneously shaped and bound by the characteristics, capacity,…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Communities of Practice, Collaborative Writing, Models
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Ledesma, Alberto – Harvard Educational Review, 2015
In this reflective essay, Alberto Ledesma explores how being undocumented can produce a particular form of writer's block. He argues that there is a pattern of predictable silences and obfuscations inherent in all undocumented immigrant autobiographies that cannot be easily negotiated when undocumented students are asked to write about "their…
Descriptors: Undocumented Immigrants, Essays, Writing (Composition), Autobiographies
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Morrison Straforini, Carol – Journal of College Student Psychotherapy, 2015
The published psychological literature on the developmental milestone that is the doctoral dissertation emphasizes either psychological interpretations or practical strategies as ways to help, each often failing to note the critical importance of the other. Clinicians need to understand underlying psychological issues that may complicate the…
Descriptors: Doctoral Dissertations, Academic Persistence, Student Motivation, Graduate Students
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Cameron, Jenny; Nairn, Karen; Higgins, Jane – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2009
Writing is the foundation of academic practice, yet academic writing is seldom explicitly taught. As a result many beginning (and experienced) academics struggle with writing and the difficult emotions, particularly the self-doubt, that writing stirs up. Yet it need not be like this. In this paper, strategies are discussed for attending to the…
Descriptors: Writing Processes, Writing Instruction, Academic Discourse, Teaching Methods
Grigorenko, Elena L., Ed.; Mambrino, Elisa, Ed.; Preiss, David D., Ed. – Psychology Press, Taylor & Francis Group, 2012
This book captures the diversity and richness of writing as it relates to different forms of abilities, skills, competencies, and expertise. Psychologists, educators, researchers, and practitioners in neighboring areas are interested in exploring how writing develops and in what manner this development can be fostered, but they lack a handy,…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Written Language, Literacy, Child Development
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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