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Elizabeth Brockman – English Journal, 2020
After ten years of public school teaching and countless student teaching observations, the author knows firsthand that English language arts (ELA) teachers are committed to teaching researched argumentative writing and, further, they often frame their assignments as questions. In this article, the author proposes that ELA teachers accelerate…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods, Prompting, Persuasive Discourse
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Larkin Weyand; Jon Balzotti; Derek L. Hansen – English Journal, 2019
Educational simulations provide students authentic contexts. These authentic contexts require situated and complex real-world arguments. Such writing scenarios help students recognize why there are often multiple interpretations of evidence, who their audience is, what they want, and what kind of genre is needed. Playable Case Studies help…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Play, Persuasive Discourse, Writing Instruction
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Darren Masserman – English Journal, 2015
This article argues that the goal of an educator is to help students realize they can be effective writers by giving them the ability to demonstrate their skills. Scene writing can make writing seem less like a chore and more like an opportunity to express ideas. As students write scenes that include both dialogue and action, they gain a deeper…
Descriptors: English Teachers, Language Arts, Writing (Composition), Dramatics
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Laurel Taylor – English Journal, 2016
This article discusses one teacher's efforts to give their students a mentor text for a persuasive, research-based writing project. The author's shift from assigning predominantly fiction to focusing more on nonfiction came as a result of their efforts to help their students move from students' current writing style -- that of a five-paragraph…
Descriptors: Reading Assignments, Nonfiction, Mentors, Books
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E. Suzanne Ehst; Lewis Caskey – English Journal, 2018
According to the authors, teachers often read about inspiring lessons in which historically marginalized students find their voices through assignments and projects that centralize issues of importance to the student. This article describes the authors' revision of a persuasive writing unit to scaffold not only writing skills but also students'…
Descriptors: Democracy, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique), Citizen Participation, Minority Group Students
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Lauren Esposito – English Journal, 2016
Whether novice or experienced, writers must come to terms with the daunting task of filling up a blank page, or screen, in an effort to produce writing. Student writers are no different. They enter teachers' classes having confronted similar difficulties with discovering what it is they want to say. In seeking to help students, they devote…
Descriptors: Collaborative Writing, Creative Activities, Prewriting, Writing Instruction
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McCann, Thomas M. – English Journal, 2010
Middle school and high school students have a conception of what the basic demands of logic are, and they draw on this understanding in anticipating certain demands of parents and teachers when the adolescents have to defend positions. At the same time, many adolescents struggle to "write" highly elaborated arguments. Teaching students lessons in…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Persuasive Discourse, Adolescents, Logical Thinking
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Carbone, Paula M. – English Journal, 2010
In this article, the author describes how she used a commonplace book assignment to help students expand their background knowledge and as a means to formulate mature, informed perspectives regarding issues of importance. In the assignment, the author wanted the students to: (1) investigate issues of the day; (2) develop multiple perspectives…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Perspective Taking, Persuasive Discourse, Critical Thinking
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Kahn, Elizabeth – English Journal, 2009
Early in the fall of 2007, one of the author's students asked whether she could pass around a petition during class protesting the "moment of silence." The Illinois legislature had recently passed a law requiring all schools to observe a moment of silence at the start of each school day. A number of students who heard the conversation…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Relevance (Education), Writing Assignments, Writing Instruction
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Grabill, Patricia – English Journal, 1992
Describes a writing assignment for high school English in which students argue persuasively on a current issue of their choice. Extends this assignment by having students revise the papers into letters to periodicals or politicians. Urges introducing students into active social discourse. (HB)
Descriptors: English Instruction, Letters (Correspondence), Persuasive Discourse, Secondary Education
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O'Shea, Catherine; Egan, Margaret – English Journal, 1980
Teachers should assign the classics, include ethnic literature in the curriculum, use peer tutors, and teach argumentative and persuasive writing in order to help students to think logically, communicate effectively, and become responsible citizens. (DD)
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, English Instruction, Ethnic Studies, Logical Thinking
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Combs, Warren E.; Sitko, Barbara – English Journal, 1981
Reports of classroom research on the effectiveness of sentence combining as a teaching technique. Notes the value of in-class research. (RL)
Descriptors: Assignments, Classroom Research, Classroom Techniques, High Schools
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Mitchell, Diana – English Journal, 1996
Provides language arts teachers with specific techniques to help content-area teachers get more writing into their classrooms. Suggests that some of these techniques might be helpful to language arts teachers themselves, especially in getting students to think about learning. (TB)
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Fiction, Interviews, Journal Writing