Publication Date
In 2025 | 0 |
Since 2024 | 0 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 0 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 1 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 6 |
Descriptor
Source
CEA Forum | 8 |
Author
Amicucci, Ann N. | 1 |
Gebhardt, Richard C. | 1 |
Kastner, Stacey | 1 |
Kraver, Jeraldine R. | 1 |
McGlinn, James E. | 1 |
McGlinn, Jeanne M. | 1 |
Raymond, Rich | 1 |
Sanzenbacher, Richard | 1 |
Strovas, Scott | 1 |
Publication Type
Journal Articles | 8 |
Reports - Descriptive | 7 |
Guides - Classroom - Teacher | 2 |
Reports - Evaluative | 1 |
Education Level
Higher Education | 6 |
Postsecondary Education | 3 |
Audience
Teachers | 1 |
Location
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Raymond, Rich – CEA Forum, 2019
To challenge resistance to required literature courses, instructors quiz students regularly on the readings; they also require examinations that ask students to define key terms, to answer background questions focused on authors and dates, to identify key passages by author/title/speaker, and to explain the thematic significance of each quotation.…
Descriptors: English Instruction, English Literature, College English, Teaching Methods
Strovas, Scott – CEA Forum, 2011
"Primary research counts, but we don't teach it." This was the sentiment, if these were not the actual words, of Lynee Lewis Gaillet in her critique of the traditional composition curriculum at the spring 2011 annual meeting of the College English Association in St. Petersburg. Gaillet proposes an alternative to furthering students' sometimes…
Descriptors: Music, Singing, College English, Freshman Composition
Amicucci, Ann N. – CEA Forum, 2011
In this article, I demonstrate how the use of reflective writing assignments in first-year composition facilitated students' understanding of their own writing process strategies. I first discuss the theoretical roots from which reflective practice among student writers grows. Next, I employ my students' voices to demonstrate that reflection…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Writing Processes, Reflective Teaching, Writing Assignments
Kraver, Jeraldine R. – CEA Forum, 2011
Integrating writing instruction into the content-area classroom poses a variety of challenges for instructors at all levels. Beyond the need to embrace a new skill set involving writing instruction, there is the resistance of students (and faculty) who find a disconnection between content-area and literacy learning. Developing a method for…
Descriptors: Literacy, College English, Writing Instruction, English Instruction
Kastner, Stacey – CEA Forum, 2010
My experience working with first year writers in courses designed to teach critical thinking and composition has introduced me to a mass of young adults who are anxious when it comes to effective written communication in a college classroom. Not only are they troubled about how to write to an audience of college professors, but they are also…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Critical Thinking, College English, Writing Strategies
Gebhardt, Richard C. – CEA Forum, 2007
Discussions of English department identity and mission more often center on the undergraduate major curriculum than on classes for general-studies and other non-major students. In such courses, though, educators have an opportunity to touch the intellectual lives of far more people than they do in courses for majors. The author argues in this…
Descriptors: Nonmajors, English Departments, College English, Literature
McGlinn, James E.; McGlinn, Jeanne M. – CEA Forum, 1990
Describes a freshman composition course which employs problem-solving exercises as a writing improvement technique. Notes that sharing ideas while solving problems builds new writers' openness and trust, whereas thinking aloud prepares students to benefit from other writers' thinking protocol methods. Suggests that brainstorming can help students…
Descriptors: Brainstorming, College English, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Sanzenbacher, Richard – CEA Forum, 1990
Calls for writing instruction that leads students to realize that meaning depends upon context and perspective. Describes a course in which students "problematize" and write about issues within literary works. Explains that students observe visual artworks which serve as companion pieces to the literary works and to students' own compositions…
Descriptors: College English, Higher Education, Imagination, Literary Criticism