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Alisa Russell – Written Communication, 2024
Many genre scholars have focused on how individuals might build genre knowledge, generally understood as the enculturation processes, gradual stages, or ingredients that lead to one's facility with a genre in context. While genre knowledge describes whether people can engage genres, it does not describe the various factors that shape how people…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Social Action, Learning, Intellectual Disciplines
Jacob Steiss; Jiali Wang; Young-Suk Grace Kim; Carol Booth Olson – Written Communication, 2024
Developing students' source-based argument writing skills is a vital educational goal for the 21st-century information society. Consequently, researchers and educators continually seek ways to understand and improve students' capacities for advancing arguments and synthesizing multiple documents, texts, or sources in a range of subject areas in…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, History Instruction, Writing (Composition), Essays
Finkenstaedt-Quinn, Solaire A.; Polakowski, Noelle; Gunderson, Brenda; Shultz, Ginger V.; Gere, Anne Ruggles – Written Communication, 2021
While many STEM faculty believe Writing-to-Learn to be an effective instructional tool, instructional barriers such as the time and effort required to provide substantive feedback to their students limit the use of writing in STEM classrooms. Incorporating peer review and revision into the writing process can help mitigate these barriers while…
Descriptors: Peer Evaluation, Revision (Written Composition), STEM Education, Scientific Concepts
Disciplinarity and Literate Activity in Civil and Environmental Engineering: A Lifeworld Perspective
Durst, Sarah – Written Communication, 2019
Too frequently, representations of disciplinary writing foreground static notions of knowledge creation and literate practice in science and engineering. Rooted in discourse community theory, such representations present normative tropes of scientific practice that background notions of disciplinarity and obscure people's lived experience and…
Descriptors: Civil Engineering, Technical Occupations, Engineering, Professional Identity
Swales, John M. – Written Communication, 2014
This is a corpus-based study of a key aspect of academic writing in one discipline (biology) by final-year undergraduates and first-, second-, and third-year graduate students. The papers come from the Michigan Corpus of Upper-level Student Papers, a freely available electronic database. The principal aim of the study is to examine the extent of…
Descriptors: Biology, College Science, Academic Discourse, Writing Across the Curriculum
Honig, Sheryl – Written Communication, 2010
This article reports on the types of scientific writing found in two primary grade classrooms. These results are part of a larger two-year study whose purpose was to examine the development of informational writing of second- and third-grade students as they participated in integrated science-literacy instruction. The primary purpose of the…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Elementary School Science, Discourse Analysis, Science Instruction
Kline, Susan L.; Ishii, Drew K. – Written Communication, 2008
This study analyzes the procedural explanations written by remedial college mathematics students. Relevant literatures suggest that six communication activities might be key in effective procedural explanations in mathematics writing: (a) orienting the learner, (b) providing kernels or definitions of concepts and procedures, (c) using exemplars or…
Descriptors: College Mathematics, Mathematics Instruction, Remedial Mathematics, Mathematical Concepts
Lerner, Neal – Written Communication, 2007
The history of writing to learn college science is tied to the development of laboratory methods. Such student-centered learning was widely hailed in the 1890s as student enrollments increased dramatically and a backlash grew against lecture and recitation methods. However, as the author shows using archival examples from Dartmouth College,…
Descriptors: Laboratories, Educational Change, College Science, Science Education

Johnson, Todd M.; Jones, Graham A.; Thornton, Carol A.; Langrall, Cynthia W.; Rous, Amy – Written Communication, 1998
Explores changes in students' probabilistic thinking and writing during an instructional program that emphasized transactional writing in a problem-solving context. Finds no significant correlations between probabilistic thinking and writing levels--students made gains in both probability reasoning and writing. Reveals their writing incorporated…
Descriptors: Content Area Writing, Grade 5, Intermediate Grades, Mathematics

Stockton, Sharon – Written Communication, 1995
Finds that the explicit definition of writing in history is "argumentation" but that the implicit expectation is for narrative. Argues that this apparent contradiction highlights the central function of academic historical discourse: the establishment of an autonomous subject of meaning that speaks from outside history about a distant and…
Descriptors: Content Area Writing, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, History
Coffin, Caroline – Written Communication, 2004
Historians generally agree that causality is central to historical writing. The fact that many school history students have difficulty handling and expressing causal relations is therefore of concern. That is, whereas historians tend to favor impersonal, abstract structures as providing suitable explanations for historical events and states of…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Historians, History Instruction, Content Area Writing

Bridgeman, Brent; Carlson, Sybil B. – Written Communication, 1984
A survey of 190 academic departments in 34 universities indicates that considerable variability exists across fields in the kinds of writing required and in preferred assessment topics. (FL)
Descriptors: Assignments, Content Area Writing, Higher Education, School Surveys

Hilgers, Thomas L.; Stitt-Bergh, Monica; Hussey, Edna Lardizabal – Written Communication, 1999
Draws on the perceptions and experiences of upper-division students enrolled in writing-intensive (WI) classes in their majors at a large state university. Discusses findings as they relate to the ideologies of writing across the curriculum and writing in the disciplines. Suggests greater attention to a field's inquiry methods and strategies for…
Descriptors: Content Area Writing, Higher Education, Problem Solving, Research Methodology
Chambliss, Marilyn J.; Christenson, Lea Ann; Parker, Carolyn – Written Communication, 2003
Explanation as a genre may support children's reasoning and understanding particularly effectively. In this study, 20 fourth graders were given the task of explaining the effects of a pollutant on an ecosystem to third graders. Before writing, they completed a commercially developed science unit, instruction in reading and writing an explanation,…
Descriptors: Models, Ecology, Grade 4, Grade 3