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Hadi, Marham Jupri; Anggraini, Siti Wahyu Puji; Lume – Online Submission, 2018
The vast majority of EFL learners found reading and writing quite challenging learning activities to engage in. This has also been the case in our EFL class. As a result, many of them feel discouraged to read and to write. These barriers also led to poor achievement in these language skills. To deal with such an issue, EFL teachers need to design…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Writing Instruction, Personal Narratives, Second Language Instruction
Connors, Robert J. – 1981
Although first enunciated in 1827 by Samuel Newman, the modes of discourse--narration, description, exposition, and argument--were not very popular until formulated in 1866 and presented in the United States in a rhetoric textbook in 1885. After 1890, they were gradually accepted by the most influential rhetoricians of the day, and their use in…
Descriptors: Classification, Descriptive Writing, Expository Writing, History
Seitz, James E. – 1995
A story told about soliciting comments and criticisms from students during a class one day reveals a number of disturbing techniques used in academic story-telling. Such story telling, which has become increasingly common in academic teaching/writing journals of late, creates the deceptive impression of sincerity and intimacy. In this case, the…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Content Analysis, Creative Writing, Literary Devices
Marsee, Mickey – 1995
One of the biggest complaints shared by writing teachers is that students lack a sense of self. Writing handbooks and teachers are full of advice and exercises pointed at assisting students in finding their voice, their persona as writers. One method that may assist writing students in finding that voice would introduce students to spy fiction.…
Descriptors: Fiction, Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Literary Genres
Bloom, Lynn Z. – 2000
Many traditionally held academic views of personal writing have myths embedded in them. These myths include: (1) anything written in the first person singular is autobiographical; (2) personal writing can only exist in an expressionist classroom and is often uncritical and unproblematic; (3) student personal writing is a dying genre, and college…
Descriptors: College English, Higher Education, Narration, Opinion Papers
O'Banion, John D. – 1989
To bridge the gap between literature and composition, and between tradition and individual talent, teachers of literature and composition should consider how Roman rhetoricians integrated many arts into their instruction on oratory. With the perspectives of Cicero and Quintilian in hand, teachers would be inclined to stress rhetorical…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Higher Education, Logical Thinking, Models
Marshall, Thomas A. – 1988
Until students have opportunities to discover the power of personal expression through writing in the narrative mode, it is dangerous to teach them writing solely in terms of institutional discourse. The goals of institutional prose, or professional writing, are not determined by the writer, and often demand an "objective" style that…
Descriptors: Discourse Modes, Higher Education, Narration, Organizational Climate
Uchmanowicz, Pauline – 1994
When a graduate student at the University of Rhode Island was asked to take a seminar at the University of New Hampshire, she experienced a major disjunction between her theoretical perspective and that of the other students and the professor. The seminar, "History of Rhetoric and Composition," was to evolve into a book narrating 40…
Descriptors: Collaborative Writing, Educational History, Exchange Programs, Higher Education
Jones, William – 1981
Basic writers can be taught to write effective expository prose if they are taught to revise, and they can make considerable progress if they are given opportunities to write narration before tackling the complexities of exposition. Narratives come easily to basic writers and allow them complete control over subject matter and language. The…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Creative Writing, Descriptive Writing, Expository Writing
Elliott, Alison – 1992
The development of narrative competence is an important part of the English curriculum in the early secondary school years. A study examined how four seventh-grade girls (two novice and two expert writers) responded to computer-based metacognitive guidance in the form of procedural facilitations. The facilitations were designed to assist the…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Software, Grade 7, Junior High Schools
Elbow, Peter – 1987
Voice is a useful critical concept for studying texts, and can be classified into three types: (1) audible voice--how much the reader "hears" the text; (2) dramatic voice--what kind of speaker or writer is implied in the text; and (3) one's own voice--the relationship of the text to the actual writer. Written language is more likely to…
Descriptors: Authors, Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Literary Devices
Palumbo, Donald – 1979
Based on the premise that fortune telling is a spontaneous narrative exercise, this paper proposes that the Tarot deck is a marvelously intricate and finely tooled mechanism for generating innumerable, remarkably coherent stories in the archetypal mode. It explains the organization of the Tarot deck, the 78 cards and their meanings, and the…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Creative Writing, Higher Education, Learning Activities
Lamberg, Walter J. – 1975
The purpose of this article is to suggest the value of a research tool which has rarely been used in studies in instruction in writing: baseline measurement of group and individual performances. This approach was used in examining the results of a study of a self-instructional program in narrative writing which was prepared for and tested by…
Descriptors: Evaluation, Independent Study, Individual Instruction, Measurement Techniques
Ross, John A.; Rolheiser, Carol; Hogaboam-Gray, Anne – 1998
Despite the burgeoning use of authentic assessment, few studies have examined effects on students. In this study, 148 students in 15 grade 4-6 classrooms were taught over an 8-week period how to evaluate their work. Their self-reflections were later compared with those of 148 control group students. Treatment group students became more accurate in…
Descriptors: Criteria, Elementary School Students, Foreign Countries, Intermediate Grades
Thralls, Charlotte – 1981
A theory of textual processing signals--cues to guide the response of any reader to a narrative text--can be evolved from Gerald Prince's theory of reading interludes and William Labov's work on narrative evaluation. An examination of these signals in two personal experience narratives written by students in remedial and freshman writing courses…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Narration, Reading Comprehension
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