Descriptor
Writing Processes | 13 |
Higher Education | 12 |
Writing Instruction | 8 |
Teaching Methods | 7 |
Writing (Composition) | 6 |
Writing Skills | 4 |
Classroom Techniques | 3 |
College English | 3 |
Models | 3 |
Writing Exercises | 3 |
Assignments | 2 |
More ▼ |
Source
College Composition and… | 13 |
Author
Coe, Richard M. | 2 |
Burkland, Jill N. | 1 |
Comprone, Joseph | 1 |
Gutierrez, Kris | 1 |
Hoar, Nancy | 1 |
Holloway, Dale W. | 1 |
Johnson, Robert | 1 |
Larsen, Richard B. | 1 |
Maimon, Elaine P. | 1 |
Petersen, Bruce T. | 1 |
Peterson, Linda | 1 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Journal Articles | 12 |
Guides - Classroom - Teacher | 11 |
Opinion Papers | 5 |
Guides - Non-Classroom | 1 |
Information Analyses | 1 |
Education Level
Audience
Practitioners | 13 |
Teachers | 4 |
Location
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating

Comprone, Joseph – College Composition and Communication, 1978
Applies Burke's dramatistic pentad to the stages of the writing process. (DD)
Descriptors: English Instruction, Higher Education, Writing (Composition), Writing Processes

Johnson, Robert – College Composition and Communication, 1987
Describes a teacher's presentation in the classroom of the drafts, notes, outlines, and other artifacts from his own papers. Recommends that teachers show their students evidence of their own struggle with the writing process in order to encourage them and convince them that all writers hesitatingly begin with a mess. (JG)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Motivation Techniques, Teacher Role, Teaching Methods

Maimon, Elaine P. – College Composition and Communication, 1979
Urges writing teachers to encourage revision and peer reading of drafts of papers so that students will know the processes writers go through to meet the requirements of the strangers who read what they write. (DD)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Peer Evaluation, Perspective Taking, Writing (Composition)

Hoar, Nancy – College Composition and Communication, 1987
Discusses how computer programing and expository writing are both based on the ability to (1) recognize that a complex whole is composed of manageable parts, and (2) identify the necessary steps for achieving a goal or supporting a generality, and (3) concentrate on and summarize a large amount of information into an abbreviated, succinct…
Descriptors: Computer Software, Expository Writing, Freshman Composition, Higher Education

Scheckels, Theodore F., Jr. – College Composition and Communication, 1983
Examines three strategies by which competitive debaters generate and organize their affirmative cases. Discusses how the persuasive writer can use these same three strategies as heuristics for deliberative discourse and as models for its organization. (HTH)
Descriptors: Competition, Debate, Higher Education, Models

Tedlock, David – College Composition and Communication, 1981
Advocates using the case approach in college writing classes. Suggests that asking students to play the roles of participants in a situation, whether real or imaginary, helps them learn to address a particular audience with a clear purpose. Offers a case approach with discussion questions and possible assignments. (RL)
Descriptors: Assignments, College English, Higher Education, Teaching Methods

Larsen, Richard B. – College Composition and Communication, 1978
Describes a teaching technique which involves the writing teacher's using the blackboard in composing a short essay in front of the class. (DD)
Descriptors: Chalkboards, Class Activities, Higher Education, Models

Petersen, Bruce T.; Burkland, Jill N. – College Composition and Communication, 1986
Describes a method used to teach freshman students how to make research a conscious part of their reading and writing processes, by helping them use their personal associations with a text and their questions about a text, to compose meaning and become conscious of the activities they are performing. (HTH)
Descriptors: College Freshmen, English Instruction, Higher Education, Metacognition

Rutter, Russell – College Composition and Communication, 1982
Explores the writing needs of probation officers and how this kind of writing can best be taught to college students specializing in criminal justice. Discusses how to gather information and prepare presentence reports and how to remain objective in corrections writing. Compares corrections reporting with traditional technical writing. (HTH)
Descriptors: Education Work Relationship, Higher Education, Job Skills, Job Training

Holloway, Dale W. – College Composition and Communication, 1981
Describes three semantic theories for teaching the writing process (case grammars, the "given-new" contract, and cohesion), with their implications for helping students communicate more effectively with their audiences. (RL)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Cohesion (Written Composition), Grammar, Higher Education

Coe, Richard M.; Gutierrez, Kris – College Composition and Communication, 1981
Presents a set of writing assignments and class activities for helping students to define their own writing problems, set their own goals, and evaluate their own progress. (RL)
Descriptors: Assignments, Classroom Techniques, College English, College Students

Coe, Richard M. – College Composition and Communication, 1981
Stresses the virtues of one technique and the limitations of another technique for focusing on a writing topic. (RL)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College English, Higher Education, Prewriting

Peterson, Linda – College Composition and Communication, 1985
Describes some of the strategies of repetition and metaphor used by Black American novelist Richard Wright, as a model that students can adopt in their own writing, both for generating ideas and for revising them. Appendixes include various drafts of an interview statement by Wright. (HTH)
Descriptors: Authors, Black Literature, Figurative Language, Language Styles