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Teaching English in the… | 5 |
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Guides - Classroom - Teacher | 5 |
Journal Articles | 5 |
Reports - Descriptive | 2 |
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Arnold, Jane – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1998
Describes how a weekly focused journal writing assessment (in which students note any use of language they find interesting, puzzling, amusing, or annoying as well as their response to it) enhances composition students' awareness of how language is used and where. Offers several different advantages of such journal writing. (SR)
Descriptors: College English, Higher Education, Journal Writing, Language Usage

Bodmer, Paul – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1991
Describes a journal writing activity designed to engage students in the exchange between text and reader. Argues that informal writing in a journal is a means of letting students find out that, if they engage themselves with a text, they will find it interesting. (RS)
Descriptors: Free Writing, Journal Writing, Prewriting, Reader Response

Bernstein, Susan Naomi – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1998
Describes how one teacher uses life writing (reading and writing about transformative life experiences) in her basic writing class to engage students and to help them understand the power and purpose of reaching out to a variety of audiences. Discusses grading life writing. (SR)
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Basic Writing, Life Events, Personal Narratives

Payne, Darin – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1998
Describes a first-year college composition course and the daily preparatory writing assignments, "inquiry response papers," that form its core. Describes how these assignments, in which students respond to their homework reading, have led to a collaborative, dialogic classroom where students realize and express their own voices, and have fostered…
Descriptors: Accountability, Classroom Communication, Freshman Composition, Group Discussion

Ruzich, Constance M. – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1999
Describes a writing assignment in which students study and imitate the language of a minority author. Discusses how the assignment helps negotiate conflicts when students resist multicultural literature, as their creative responses mediate between themselves and works they might otherwise find foreign and antagonistic. (SR)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Cultural Pluralism, English Instruction, Higher Education