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Kuhlman, Keely – Exercise Exchange, 1999
Describes an assignment for high school or college literature classes in which students focus on a particular character, answer a list of questions about that character, and eventually write an imagined yet realistic dialog with that character. Notes that this helps students grasp a character's complexity and depth. (SR)
Descriptors: Characterization, English Instruction, High Schools, Higher Education
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Wilcox, Thomas W. – Exercise Exchange, 1998
Offers a writing exercise intended for college English classes, which offers a hypothetical case to be considered (along with directions for papers and additional leads) that prompts students to consider ceremonial uses of language (such as the "Pledge of Allegiance") and various issues related to it. (SR)
Descriptors: Ceremonies, Class Activities, English Instruction, Higher Education
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Lambert, Michele – Exercise Exchange, 1999
Describes a writing assignment in which students read only the first two paragraphs of Charles Dickens's novel "A Tale of Two Cities" and then, after some brainstorming and prewriting, write a paragraph or two modeled on those, explaining the confusion and turmoil of the present day. Notes how Dickens's expressions become more familiar…
Descriptors: Class Activities, English Instruction, Language Arts, Literature Appreciation
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Beidler, Peter G. – Exercise Exchange, 2000
Describes three assignments the author uses when teaching Chaucer (suitable for college or college prep high school classes) in which students learn what iambic pentameter is by writing two rhyming couplets, a ten-line conversation in rhyming couplets, and a creative project of at least 25 rhyming couplets, all in iambic pentameter. (SR)
Descriptors: Class Activities, English Instruction, Higher Education, Literature Appreciation
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Hewitt Julia – Exercise Exchange, 2000
Describes how the author and her high school English students begin their study of Thoreau's "Walden" by mining the text for quotations to inspire their own writing and discussion on the topic, "How does Thoreau speak to you or how could he speak to someone you know?" (SR)
Descriptors: Class Activities, English Instruction, Literature Appreciation, Reading Writing Relationship
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Sanchez, Rebecca – Exercise Exchange, 1997
Presents a variety of reading, writing, art, and discussion activities to keep students interested in studying "Romeo and Juliet." Describes using the film version of the play as a companion piece to unify the oral reading. (RS)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Class Activities, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Drama
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Parry, Sally E. – Exercise Exchange, 1995
Describes how showing a film version of a novel, short story, or play after a class has read and talked about the text can be an interesting way to encourage students to think about the text and develop a critical stance. Offers examples from two texts and their film versions. (SR)
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), English Instruction, Films, Higher Education
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Lundy, Jo – Exercise Exchange, 1999
Describes a writing assignment (useful for junior high through college age students) that seeks to improve students' descriptive writing through a set of class writing assignments using visual and concrete objects. Allows students to gain awareness, gain knowledge and discuss it, and ask questions as a body of learners rather than in isolation.…
Descriptors: Descriptive Writing, English Instruction, Higher Education, Secondary Education
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Razzano, Elaine – Exercise Exchange, 2000
Describes a writing exercise for middle schoolers to college students that encourages students to become more aware of language, especially word choice and audience in their writing, by writing lipograms (compositions from which all words containing a certain letter are omitted). Notes it can be used as a pre-revision activity, part of a poetry…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Higher Education, Language Arts, Revision (Written Composition)
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Sanzenbacher, Richard – Exercise Exchange, 2000
Describes two assignments that help students realize the dialectic between parts (how one part affects the understanding of all other parts) by having students create their own photographs and physical structures, combine the parts in various way, and consider (in their written papers) the difference it makes. (SR)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Creativity, English Instruction, Higher Education
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Lampert, Kathleen; Mizoguchi, Allyson – Exercise Exchange, 2001
Argues that the historical development of written narrative during the past century confounds traditional distinctions between fiction and nonfiction. Argues that students need to develop cognitive complexity. Outlines a sequence of assignments intended to destabilize students' assumptions about the difference between reality and fantasy, fiction…
Descriptors: Class Activities, English Instruction, Fiction, Literature Appreciation
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Lindholdt, Paul J. – Exercise Exchange, 2000
Describes the evolution of an assignment in a college-level English class in which students present to the class their analysis of lyrics to a favorite song of theirs (on a particular topic). Shows how students thereby are eased into interpretation, critical examination, and some of the principles of literature. (SR)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Critical Thinking, English Instruction, Higher Education
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Blumner, Jacob S.; Barnett, Robert W. – Exercise Exchange, 2000
Presents two assignments that are designed to help students (at the high school and college levels) to develop a sense of place while building skills to improve their narrative writing. Includes the assignment sheet. Describes how students create a Michigan Travel Guide from their final drafts. (SR)
Descriptors: Descriptive Writing, English Instruction, High Schools, Higher Education
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Crabb, Alfred L., Jr. – Exercise Exchange, 1998
Describes a class writing exercise for high school and college English classes (which functions well early in the first semester), which emphasizes a basic idea (that close inspection of a subject will reveal that there is a lot to say about it) by having students describe in detail a person's face, first as a class and then individually. (SR)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Descriptive Writing, English Instruction, High Schools
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Williams, Jerri Knowlton – Exercise Exchange, 1994
Considers how writing teachers can help students become more inventive writers. Gives different techniques for developing invention skills. Outlines an approach for fostering invention in writing. (HB)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, English Instruction, Essays, Expository Writing
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