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Stephen R. Flemming – English Journal, 2021
Having students read news articles or novels, watch television snippets, engage in class discussions, essay-writing, emailing, and drafting letters are excellent ways to broach any number of society's systemic and oppressive social maladies. Engaging in these activities in the English language arts classroom can serve as a catalyst to encourage…
Descriptors: Advocacy, Scripts, Social Problems, Social Justice
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Mary Frances Buckley-Marudas – English Journal, 2018
This article focuses on how adolescent writers took up an invitation to write and share a piece of work in school that wasn't tied to a grade. Students' responses to this invitation are examined in an effort to revise some of the typical approaches to teaching writing.
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods, Time Management
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Schelhaas, David; Schelhaas, Luke – English Journal, 1992
Describes the positive effect a teacher had on his son's writing by offering encouragement and interest rather than assignments and criticisms. (PRA)
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Parent Participation, Poetry, Secondary Education
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Walshe, R. D. – English Journal, 1987
Criticizes theoretical schema of learning/writing processes (e.g., steps such as problem identifying, investigating, getting insights, expressing, refining, announcing, and reacting) to the actual experience of process which never fits such classifications. Cites theories of J. Dewey and F. M. Alexander to distinguish between attention to means…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, English Instruction, Learning Processes, Process Education
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Smith, Michael W.; Hillocks, George, Jr. – English Journal, 1989
Examines results of a study using the inquiry method in composition instruction. Findings suggest that writing tasks that engage students in specifiable inquiry strategies should be an important part of every writing curriculum. (RAE)
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Inquiry, Learning Processes, Observational Learning