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Xiaolong Cheng; Lawrence Jun Zhang; Qiaozhen Yan – Language Teaching Research, 2025
As an important instructional affordance, teacher written feedback is widely used in second language (L2) writing contexts. While copious evidence has shown that such a pedagogical practice can facilitate L2 learners' writing performance, especially their writing accuracy, little is known about how novice writing teachers conceptualize and enact…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Second Language Instruction, Feedback (Response), Teacher Response
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Keith Rhodes – College Composition and Communication, 2019
A limited mixed-method study revealed that students could alter written style after direct style instruction, but the effect faded quickly. Instead, students reverted to culturally structured intuition to make conscious, contrary choices. Thus, direct instruction in precise forms of style should probably yield to methods that build culturally…
Descriptors: Teaching Styles, Writing Instruction, Writing Skills, Culturally Relevant Education
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Boone, Stephanie; Chaney, Sara Biggs; Compton, Josh; Donahue, Christiane; Gocsik, Karen – Composition Forum, 2012
While "transfer" has become, in recent years, a subject of great research interest to our field, we still have much to learn about how we can best use this research knowledge to inform local efforts in program development. In this profile, we describe the foundations of the Dartmouth Institute for Writing and Rhetoric and explain how…
Descriptors: Literacy, Rhetoric, Program Development, Writing Instruction
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Patch, Paula – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2010
As students increasingly rely on digital media to locate information, composition instructors must incorporate into writing instruction critical evaluation of and reflection on students' use of Web content. A growing problem in the composition class is underdeveloped critical digital literacy skills. To become fully literate, students need more…
Descriptors: Criticism, Encyclopedias, Literacy, Writing Instruction
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Fulford, Amanda – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2009
In this paper I consider one aspect of how student writing is supported in the university. I focus on the use of the "writing frame", questioning its status as a vehicle for facilitating student voice, and in the process questioning how that notion is itself understood. I illustrate this by using examples from the story of the 1944 Hollywood film…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Writing Instruction, Films, Criticism
Allen, Julia M. – 1991
A critical rhetoric is needed for those interested in feminist discourse, a means of both persuasion and critique. It has been suggested that monologic, fundamentally one-sided argument is inappropriate for a feminist discourse that should instead teach methods of negotiation and mediation. Kenneth Burke proposed shattering views of ideological…
Descriptors: College Students, Discourse Analysis, Feminism, Higher Education
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Smith, Alfred N. – French Review, 1988
Describes two techniques that use poetry written by foreign language students to help them gain a greater understanding of poetry. The first technique elicits students' reactions to their own poetry, while the second approach uses students' poetry to teach about poetry. (CB)
Descriptors: College Students, Creative Writing, French, Higher Education
Lavelle, Ellen – 1997
This paper advances a taxonomy of college writing styles based on a broad spectrum of writing research. The taxonomy focuses on the constructs of deep and surface writing and the role of selfhood in affecting writing strategies and outcomes. It compares constructs such as reflective versus reproductive, hierarchical versus linear, active versus…
Descriptors: Classification, College Instruction, College Students, Higher Education
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Ellis, Robert A.; Taylor, Charlotte E.; Drury, Helen – Instructional Science: An International Journal of Learning and Cognition, 2005
Learning through writing is a way of learning not only the appropriate written expression of disciplinary knowledge, but also the knowledge itself through reflection and revision. This study investigates the quality of a writing experience provided to university students in a first-year biology subject. The writing instruction methodology used is…
Descriptors: Writing Processes, Writing Instruction, Learning Experience, Writing (Composition)
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Rose, Shirley K. – Rhetoric Review, 1990
Reviews college students' compositions describing the acquisition of their literacy skills. Reports that males' anecdotes tend to reflect individual achievement and competition, whereas females' writings display a process and cooperation focus. Argues that new research must be conscious of these differences, or gender-blind studies may be…
Descriptors: College Students, Discourse Modes, Higher Education, Language Acquisition
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Tebeaux, Elizabeth – Journal of Business and Technical Communication, 1990
Finds that experience and education can produce extensive changes in the style and content of men's and women's writing, eliminate the dominance of gender-based writing characteristics, and help students develop a variety of styles. Suggests that instruction can help students develop varied, androgynous styles important for job-related…
Descriptors: Business Communication, Case Studies, College Students, Communication Research
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Hass, Michael; Osborn, Jan – Across the Disciplines, 2007
This study uses student reflections of previous success in academic writing to guide instructors as they design writing assignments. Seventy-one students in five classes responded to a questionnaire designed to help them identify particularly successful writing experiences and reflect on the circumstances, strategies, and methods they believed…
Descriptors: Student Writing Models, Writing Across the Curriculum, Writing Processes, Reflection
Reed, Arthea – 1985
After students recommended books by M. E. Kerr, such as "Is That You, Miss Blue?" and "Dinky Hocker Shoots Smack," a college teacher realized that Kerr's books contained memorable characters and were suitable for classroom use. Particularly useful was Kerr's 1983 nonfiction book, "Me, Me, Me, Me, Me," which recounts…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Creative Writing, English Instruction
Jeske, Doreen Pat – 1981
A technique to help English as a second language students master the basic elements of expository prose is considered in terms of course objectives and the types of assignments used to accomplish them. A characteristic of many highly verbal students entering a college program is their propensity to "talk on paper" in an informal, ungrammatical,…
Descriptors: College Second Language Programs, College Students, Course Objectives, English (Second Language)