Publication Date
In 2025 | 0 |
Since 2024 | 0 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 1 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 3 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 3 |
Descriptor
Source
Online Submission | 2 |
Grantee Submission | 1 |
International Society for… | 1 |
Journal of Basic Writing | 1 |
SPEAQ Journal | 1 |
Author
Huang, Su-Yueh | 2 |
Auman, Ann E. | 1 |
Bliss, Carolyn | 1 |
Bolling, Anna L. | 1 |
Bowers, Bradley R. | 1 |
Canfield, Donna Kirkley | 1 |
Castro, Caridad | 1 |
Collins, James L. | 1 |
Connolly, Guy | 1 |
Cook, Betsy B. | 1 |
Copeland, Kathleen | 1 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Education Level
Higher Education | 3 |
Postsecondary Education | 2 |
High Schools | 1 |
Secondary Education | 1 |
Audience
Practitioners | 9 |
Teachers | 9 |
Researchers | 1 |
Students | 1 |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Sciullo, Nick – International Society for Technology, Education, and Science, 2020
Hip-hop offers opportunities to rethink citation and argument. Hip-hop's melding with digital media means that students and scholars alike must keep abreast of citation style changes and continually investigate what counts as evidence in the classroom. This involves considering the ways in which popular culture, namely hip-hop, can help students…
Descriptors: Music, Critical Thinking, Citations (References), Teaching Methods
Fiona Kwai-peng Siu – Online Submission, 2023
Peer review is generally regarded as a useful learning tool for students, providing them with opportunities to interact with their peers when engaging in the process of critical reading and critical thinking, thus possibly raising students' motivation to learn. For peer review to be a manageable task for students, appropriate scaffolding is…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Peer Evaluation, Student Motivation, Learning Motivation
Martin, Kit; Lam, Eva – Grantee Submission, 2020
Transnational youth use digital media to affiliate with diverse cultural and linguistic practices, as demonstrated through the use of multiple languages and hybrid linguistic codes, media genres and multimodal expressions in the youths' online communication and writing (Black, 2009; Domingo, 2014; Kim, 2016). This study introduces a learning…
Descriptors: Multilingualism, Information Technology, Language Usage, Code Switching (Language)
Pace, Tom – 2001
This paper discusses the importance of stylistic variety to the writing of beautiful language, even as that writing is used as a tool of critical consciousness. It begins by discussing the application of style for socially responsible rhetorical communication, through revealing to students that language used in multiple rhetorical situations both…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Language Usage, Rhetoric, Rhetorical Theory
Sidler, Michelle – 1996
In his 1976 article, "Grammars of Style: New Options in Composition," Winston Weathers calls for a Grammar B, an alternate set of conventions which govern the construction of whole compositions. He urges compositionists to look beyond the "well-made box" and consider other options for compositional patterns and discourse…
Descriptors: Feminism, Grammar, Higher Education, Language Usage
Vande Kopple, William J. – 1996
Some insights into the nature of functional grammar can be useful for teachers of composition. There are four ways that functional grammar stands in opposition to common linguistics in the United States. First, for functionalists (those practicing functional grammar), the starting point is with kinds of meanings, not with kinds of structures; the…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Grammar, Higher Education, Language Usage
Bowers, Bradley R. – 1994
In her much-quoted statement of principles "A Room of One's Own," Virginia Woolf wishes for "a woman's sentence." In that essay, she doubts that a woman can use the same sentence as a man to write literature, because "the weight, the pace, the stride of a man's mind are too unlike her own for her to lift anything…
Descriptors: Diachronic Linguistics, Females, Feminism, Higher Education
Johnson, Sabina Thorne – 1984
The language journal can be an effective aid for teaching students to be aware of and sensitive to language. Students write down any observations that interest them about the language they hear or read in everyday life, together with their speculations on the causes of such language. The journal is devoted specifically to language because an…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Higher Education, Language Usage, Listening
Keiser, Samuel E.; DeLuca, Emeric – 1981
Arguing that to consider only the writer's mental processes is an intellectualist view of the composing process that does not present a fully human way of knowing, this paper takes the position that the writer is more than a mind at work and that an account of the writer as knower must include a consideration of the interaction between mind and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Expressive Language, Language Usage, Learning Theories
Ghosn, Irma K. – 1996
A technique for helping English-as-a-Second-Language students learn to write accurate paraphrases and summaries, free from personal interpretation, is described. Students first read, in pairs, a paragraph that has a main idea and requires some inferential thinking, especially about the tone and/or purpose. After a specific period of time, students…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, English (Second Language), Language Usage, Reading Comprehension
Auman, Ann E.; Cook, Betsy B. – 1995
A study surveyed two groups in the fall of 1994, journalism educators and newspaper editors. Educators completed a survey regarding the course content and skill areas emphasized in beginning level copy editing courses, while editors were asked to respond to questions regarding the skills they expect entry-level copy editors to have. Respondents…
Descriptors: Editing, Higher Education, Job Skills, Journalism Education
Narain, Mona – 1991
Writing teachers need to recognize the special circumstances of culturally displaced students. A specific category of such students are those from the Asian subcontinent, who are not exactly non-native speakers of English, but who do speak non-standard American English. These students occupy a subaltern (marginal) position: they can neither be…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, English (Second Language), Foreign Students, Higher Education
Rosu, Anca – 1988
Shirley Brice Heath's "Ways With Words," which deals with cultural differences and shows ways to negotiate a translation of culture, can be used to formulate a pedagogy which alerts students to cultural differences and encourages students to fit their own culturally inherited logical structures and personal styles into a rhetoric which…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Cultural Differences, Higher Education, Language Usage

Zamel, Vivian – Journal of Basic Writing, 2000
Presents a talk addressing "language issues"--issues of student writers who are not native speakers of English, who are struggling with standard English usage, and/or who are unfamiliar with the conventions of academic discourse. Offers an explanation of what writing-to-learn pedagogy should be and do. (SG)
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Higher Education, Language Usage, Student Participation
Hood, Michael D. – 1986
There are two types of literacy: mechanical literacy and critical literacy. Those who teach mechanical literacy use language to oppress, while those who teach critical literacy use language to liberate. The mechanical view of literacy oppresses because it encourages passivity and acceptance of authority, places a disproportionate emphasis on…
Descriptors: Critical Reading, Critical Thinking, Educational Philosophy, Freshman Composition