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Chadwick, Jocelyn A. – English Journal, 2012
In his foundational work, "English Composition and Rhetoric," Alexander Bain set forth the framework for what students and teachers now routinely refer to as the five-paragraph essay. Teachers were so inculcated with Bain's paradigm for the "perfect" essay format, they in turn have inculcated their students, and they just say now, "Write an…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Writing Skills, Writing (Composition), Process Approach (Writing)
Zuidema, Leah A. – English Journal, 2012
In this "prosumer" era in which people seem always to be producing and consuming texts, words matter as much as--or more than--they ever have. Learning how grammar works in the texts they read and write is essential to students' literacy. It is time to reframe English teachers' view to include both writing "and" reading as contexts for grammar…
Descriptors: Grammar, Educational Change, Change Strategies, Educational Strategies
Peer reviewedCarney, Barbara – English Journal, 1996
Explains how a teacher teaches process writing in her mainstream high school classes, despite her obligation to cover grammar, literature, vocabulary, research, and communication. Shows how some approaches to process writing can be modified to fit it into a tighter, more structured course. (TB)
Descriptors: Process Approach (Writing), Secondary Education, Teaching Methods, Writing (Composition)
Peer reviewedLatta, B. Dawn – English Journal, 1991
Argues the relative merits of using in-process and retrospective journals, during and after the writing process, to empower students to explore and use their own ways of constructing knowledge to make connections as they write. (KEH)
Descriptors: Grade 10, Process Approach (Writing), Rhetorical Invention, Secondary Education
Peer reviewedLiftig, Robert A. – English Journal, 1990
Describes a sequence of writing and evaluation exercises that provides students with an authentic writing task and places it within a social context that is ideal for the process-writing classroom. Notes that this method provides a supportive and gradual introduction to peer evaluation for both teachers and students. (MM)
Descriptors: Peer Evaluation, Process Approach (Writing), Secondary Education, Student Evaluation
Peer reviewedRodrigues, Raymond J. – English Journal, 1985
Maintains that the unfettered process approach to writing instruction has been just as artificial as the traditional skill training approach and that students need structure, models to practice from, and improvement of mechanical skills, as well as time to think through their ideas, to revise them, and to write for real audiences. (EL)
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational Trends, Process Approach (Writing), Secondary Education
Peer reviewedGordon, Tina – English Journal, 1996
Looks at how writing instruction has progressed 25 years after Janet Emig and other scholars investigated the composing process of writing students and put forth the notion of process writing. Presents three teacher profiles that demonstrate the wide variety of classroom practice in writing instruction now in use. (TB)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Classroom Techniques, Process Approach (Writing), Secondary Education
Peer reviewedSteinlage, Theresa M. – English Journal, 1990
Describes ways in which students can become better editors of their own writing by discovering their own error patterns. (RS)
Descriptors: Editing, English Instruction, Error Correction, Process Approach (Writing)
Peer reviewedHouse, Jeff – English Journal, 1993
Discusses the processes by which students think through and compose essays. Shows how writers often begin with the conclusion, or the ending. Provides a basic three-step model which allows students to analyze literary works systematically, with the objective of producing organized essays. (HB)
Descriptors: English Curriculum, English Instruction, Essays, Literary Criticism
Peer reviewedIanacone, John A. – English Journal, 1996
Explains how an English teacher settled into an unproductive, formulaic approach to teaching writing and how he reformed himself and his teaching through a discovery of the processes involved in writing. Describes exercises and notebooks that furthered his new "process" approach to teaching writing. (TB)
Descriptors: Process Approach (Writing), Secondary Education, Teacher Behavior, Teacher Improvement
Peer reviewedVivion, Michael J. – English Journal, 1986
Responds to Raymond Rodrigues's l985 "English Journal" article presenting reservations about a too-narrow and too-dogmatic definition and application of the writing process approach to the teaching of writing. Addresses concerns that the article would provide ammunition from the traditionalists and that new writing process converts would find…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, English Instruction, Process Approach (Writing), Secondary Education
Peer reviewedBaines, Lawrence; Baines, Coleen; Kunkel, Anthony; Stanley, Gregory Kent – English Journal, 1999
Describes three basic variations on the process approach to teaching writing witnessed while observing over 300 secondary English teachers: the "classic" process approach, the "antigrammarian" approach, and the "five paragraph" approach. Argues that the idea of error must be allowed back into the classroom, and that lockstep allegiance to a set of…
Descriptors: English Instruction, English Teachers, Error Correction, Instructional Effectiveness
Peer reviewedMcManus, Ginger; Kirby, Dan – English Journal, 1988
Suggests that peer group instruction is one of the most significant benefits to have emerged from the process approach to writing instruction. Presents a teacher's classroom research on the peer group response method. (ARH)
Descriptors: Classroom Research, Cooperative Learning, English Instruction, Grade 10

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