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Lyons, A. Wendy – 1996
Most freshmen who have been introduced to the scientific report are unaware of its rhetorical complexities and problem-solving purpose. Instead, they experience the task of writing lab reports as a perfunctory recording of prescribed activities. In 1994 an instructor, faced with the taks of developing a writing across the curriculum (WAC) sequence…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Higher Education, Sciences, Student Needs
Kosidowski, Paul – 1996
An architecture design studio classroom is a community. The myth of the solitary student is destroyed by the very structure of the classroom: students can use the room at any time, students share their works-in-progress and final products with the class, and the class is a congenial and informal mix of discussion, comments, critiques, and…
Descriptors: Architectural Education, Class Activities, Classroom Environment, Higher Education
Fulwiler, Toby – 1989
A writing class that includes individuals from different disciplines can allow its members to gain a useful perspective on what people do, study, and stand for in the world outside the writing class. There are three assignments that can be particularly useful to explain the view of writing as an extra-disciplinary activity: (1) studying a prose…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Interdisciplinary Approach, Nonfiction, Research Papers (Students)
Cross, Geoffrey; Wills, Katherine – 2001
A longitudinal study combined Stephen Tsuchdi's Workaday activities with Bloom's taxonomy of educational objectives to bridge the WAC/WID (writing across the curriculum/writing in the disciplines) divide. The researchers hoped that by combining concrete activities that can be applied across disciplines with a Bloomian conceptual framework of…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Interviews, Longitudinal Studies, Research Methodology
Tait, Alice A. – 1989
A study conducted at Central Michigan University examined the effective use of undergraduate teaching assistants as small group leaders by the Journalism Department for its writing across the curriculum program (WAC). The teaching assistants who participated--students with a minor in teaching high school journalism--emerged as an important…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Journalism Education, School Surveys, Teaching Assistants
Julian, Faye D. – 1989
Journal writing can be used as a tool for the assessment of teaching while allowing students to have an active and expressive voice in their learning. Journal writing provides an excellent interactive format in which students can more freely express their understanding or lack of understanding of the subject matter. The entries also frequently…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Higher Education, Journal Writing, Speech Communication
Wauchope, Barbara – 1990
Teachers in the social sciences have found that journals can be useful tools in their classes. Depending on the needs and preferences of the teacher, a variety of formats can be used: highly structured journals based on regular teacher-directed classroom and homework assignments or completely free-form diary-like personal types. No matter what the…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Higher Education, Journal Writing, Self Expression
Reese, Diane J.; Zielonka, Paula S. – 1989
A review of current research in writing to learn in the content areas provides a basis for focusing on instructional strategies, use of text structure frames, and metacognitive writing strategies. Students can use writing to comprehend to learn content area text in a variety of ways based on their particular learning objectives for that particular…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Higher Education, Metacognition, Reader Text Relationship
McCabe, Don F. – 1994
Writing and discussion are excellent ways for students to master content, develop analytical abilities, and become active and collaborative learners. The Writing Across the Curriculum movement offers a theoretical framework for the use of writing in instruction, maintaining that writing skills are primarily thinking skills, that writing is a…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Curriculum, Higher Education, Interdisciplinary Approach
Blanchard, Lydia – 1987
An alternative curriculum for Freshman Composition, designed to help students develop cognitive skills useful for academic writing in other courses, involves eight discipline-specific assignments, building from relatively simple writing tasks such as taking lecture notes and keeping an academic journal, through book reports, essay examinations,…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Content Area Writing, Essays, Freshman Composition
Fellows, Nancy J. – 1993
This study examined the effect of an experimental educational psychology course on preservice teachers' ideas about teaching. The experimental course immersed students in writing as a response to reading, writing to reflect on previous beliefs, and a teaching model to help students question their experiences and beliefs founded in previous school…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Cognitive Restructuring, Course Content, Discovery Processes