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Finch, Mary – English in Australia, 2021
Hattie and Timperley's (2007) model of effective feedback, widely used in teacher professional development, provides an easily-applied framework for thinking about the information contained in feedback. However, the model simplifies a complex phenomenon shaped in practice by interpersonal, disciplinary and institutional aspects. Examining the…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Writing Evaluation, Writing Instruction, Faculty Development
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Andrew Rejan – English Journal, 2017
The author explores the tension between the social and cognitive definition of "argument" in the Common Core's theoretical rationale and the structural approach to argument reflected in the exemplars of student writing, evaluating the implications of these inconsistencies for the high school English classroom.
Descriptors: Common Core State Standards, High School Students, English Instruction, Writing (Composition)
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Zucker, Lauren; Hicks, Troy – Contemporary Issues in Technology and Teacher Education (CITE Journal), 2019
This article explores the writing processes of 22 English education scholars over the course of 23 months, resulting in the 2018 publication of an updated National Council of Teachers of English position statement, Beliefs for Integrating Technology into the English Language Arts Classroom. Through a qualitative approach, authors investigated the…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Language Arts, Teacher Collaboration, English Teachers
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Riecken, Nancy – CEA Forum, 2009
Can music help students become better thinkers and writers? Over the past three years, the author has incorporated some basic music training techniques in her classrooms to help her teach the writing process to students who would otherwise click her off. The students have developed clearer thinking and organizational skills, and have increased…
Descriptors: Writing Processes, Teaching Methods, Music Education, Writing Instruction
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Graff, Nelson – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2010
This article describes an assignment piloted in spring of 2008 called the Rhetorical Analysis Project, which required students to analyze three different texts addressing a common issue, compose an argument about the representation of that issue as illustrated by those texts, and revise that argument to match a rhetorical model they chose from…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Transfer of Training, Rhetorical Criticism, High Stakes Tests
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Morgan, Wendy – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2006
This paper examines the processes of creative writing, exploring in particular how intuition and analysis, unconscious and conscious, work together, and how the social and the personal are involved in these processes. The author discusses her experience of writing a sustained narrative poem with lyrical elements, and then as a teacher-educator…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Writing Instruction, Poetry, English Instruction
Nold, Ellen W. – 1979
Research that purports to judge communicative sophistication on the basis of the revising behaviors of students must control for at least three variables: the subjective difficulty of the task; the student's ability to generate alternate wordings, spellings, and the like; and the student's preferred strategies of composing. Revising is not a…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, English Instruction, Research Problems, Writing (Composition)
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Penrose, Ann M.; Geisler, Cheryl – College Composition and Communication, 1994
Uses a case study to explore the concept of academic authority and how it manifests itself in written arguments. Investigates how differences in authority are played out in the academic environment. Examines how the lack of authority shapes the reading and writing practices adopted by students. (HB)
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Case Studies, English Curriculum, English Instruction
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Smagorinsky, Peter; O'Donnell-Allen, Cindy – Journal of Literacy Research, 1998
Analyzes a small group of 12th-grade students who interpreted the character of Gertrude in "Hamlet" through a "body biography," a life-sized human outline filled with student-generated words and images. Concludes with a reconsideration of the notion of engagement that includes attention to both the immediate social relations…
Descriptors: Characterization, Context Effect, English Instruction, Grade 12
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Fleitz, Elizabeth – CEA Forum, 2007
Having celebrated its fiftieth anniversary in 2005, the Advanced Placement (AP) program has received quite a bit of attention in the past few years due mainly to its exponential growth in popularity. While much of this attention has been positive, a significant amount of criticism has attacked the assumptions of the AP program, aligning it with…
Descriptors: Advanced Placement, Advanced Placement Programs, English Instruction, English Curriculum
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Arrington, Phillip – Journal of Advanced Composition, 1984
Draws an analogy between reading and writing, and between reading and responding to the world. Concludes that reading, like writing and responding to the world around us, is revisionary. (MS)
Descriptors: Cognitive Dissonance, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Psychology, English Instruction
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Wallace, David L. – College English, 2006
The author reads five volumes of "College English" with attention to the extent to which authors account for issues of systemic difference in their writing--both in their representations of themselves as authors and in their representations of others--as one means to explore how (indeed whether) we have begun to transcend normativity in our…
Descriptors: College English, English Instruction, Authors, Writing Processes
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Parker, Robert P. – English Education, 1988
Claims that there are many writing teachers, not just a few English/language arts teachers who are so designated, and that writing is already taught across the curriculum. Argues that teacher educators must reconsider their exclusive concern with methods and focus on teachers' theories of teaching and learning. (MS)
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Elementary Secondary Education, English Instruction, Higher Education
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McManus, 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