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Chris W. Gallagher – College Composition and Communication, 2016
This article offers a fuller account than we currently have of the complex, uneasy relationship between behaviorism and writing studies in order both to complicate our disciplinary historiography and to encourage writing scholars, teachers, and program administrators to articulate productive and unproductive understandings of writing behaviors.
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction, Behaviorism, Behavior Patterns
Jeffrey A. Bacha – College Composition and Communication, 2016
Borrowing from rhetorically based theories of usability, this article offers an invention tactic designed to help students understand how mundane features of everyday dwelling places have significant impacts on their educational experiences. Additionally, the offered tactic helps students understand how to craft rhetorical critiques in contexts…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Rhetoric, College English, Writing (Composition)
Russel K. Durst – College Composition and Communication, 2015
This essay examines James Britton's role in the development of composition studies as an academic discipline and considers the relevance of his work in the field today. It contends that his influence arose, paradoxically, through his construction of an anti-disciplinary theory of the role of language in teaching and learning. Finally, in response…
Descriptors: Writing Research, Writing (Composition), Higher Education, Scholarship
Michael-John DePalma – College Composition and Communication, 2015
This qualitative study examines how writers perceive the mobilization and adaptation of their print-based writing knowledge and multiple literacies when remediating written essays into digital stories. It also outlines a pedagogical tool that can help writers reflect on what they might transfer as they compose across media.
Descriptors: Writing Attitudes, Rhetoric, Essays, Story Telling
Sarah Read; Michael J. Michaud – College Composition and Communication, 2015
This article connects the pedagogy of the multimajor professional writing (MMPW) course with two important contemporary discussions in composition studies: the pedagogy called writing about writing (WAW) and the conversation about the transferability of rhetorical knowledge from school to work. We argue that the capaciousness of the WAW approach…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, College Faculty, Writing (Composition), Writing Across the Curriculum
Colomb, Gregory G. – College Composition and Communication, 2010
Central to the future of rhetoric and composition (or writing studies or whatever label we use) is the service mission of composition: to teach students to write. But that term "service" has not and will not serve us well. This essay examines the limitations and dangers of a service mission and explores a different model, that of a franchise, a…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Business Communication, Rhetorical Invention, Models
Bazerman, Charles – College Composition and Communication, 2010
This article presents a written version of the address the author gave at the Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC) meeting in San Francisco on March 12, 2009. In this address, the author talks about the wonder of writing and discusses how writing has been considered sacred. Reading and writing are associated with inwardness…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Conference Papers, Writing Skills, Writing Achievement
Addison, Joanne; McGee, Sharon James – College Composition and Communication, 2010
This article synthesizes and extends data from some of the most prominent and promising large-scale research projects in writing studies while also presenting results from the authors' own research. By juxtaposing these studies, the authors offer a complex understanding of writing practices at the high school and college level. Future directions…
Descriptors: Writing Processes, High Schools, Trend Analysis, Research Projects
Shipka, Jody – College Composition and Communication, 2005
This essay presents a task-based multimodal framework for composing grounded in theories of multiple media and goal formation. By examining the way two students negotiated the complex communicative tasks presented them in class, the essay underscores the benefits associated with asking students to attend to the various motives, activities, tools,…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction, Writing Strategies

Podis, JoAnne M.; Podis, Leonard A. – College Composition and Communication, 1990
Offers a modest new taxonomy for rhetorical heuristics for arrangement, one of the five major divisions of classical rhetoric. Suggests schemes suitable for academic discourse, such as "obvious before remarkable,""literal before symbolic," and "explanation before complication." Supplies a limited theoretical context…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Higher Education, Rhetoric, Writing Instruction

Guilford, Chuck – College Composition and Communication, 1990
Discusses a process to guide students at various levels of writing ability to inquire into unfamiliar and often intimidating subject areas. Notes the process is based on a Piagetian learning cycle that asks students to identify areas of cognitive dissonance, and to engage in a conversation about ways of resolving their uncertainty. (RS)
Descriptors: Content Area Writing, Higher Education, Teaching Methods, Writing Assignments

Stotsky, Sandra – College Composition and Communication, 1990
Analyzes why conceptual ambiguity surrounds the subject of writing plans: why they are viewed alternatively favorably and unfavorably; why they are sometimes mental and sometimes written constructs; and why they are sometimes indistinguishable from writing goals. Concludes that one problem is the view of writing as product. (SG)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Outlining (Discourse), Planning, Writing Instruction

Shaw, Margaret L. – College Composition and Communication, 1991
States that, by teaching students to look for a relationship between what they say and what they do not say in their writing, teachers can show students that it is possible to establish new configurations, to change their minds, if they choose. (MG)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Teacher Response, Teaching Methods, Writing (Composition)