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Kathrynn DiTommaso – Forum for International Research on Students and Teaching, 2024
This paper reports the findings of a study of student writing that assessed the skill needs of a cohort of developmental writing students enrolled in a co-requisite composition course at a community college that is part of the City University of New York (CUNY). This credit-bearing course fulfills the first half of the required composition…
Descriptors: Writing Skills, Freshman Composition, Writing Evaluation, Diagnostic Teaching
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Emily Schnee – Teachers College Record, 2024
Background: Upon returning to in-person teaching at Kingsborough Community College after the pandemic, I realized something profound had shifted in my students. The well-documented drop in community college enrollment attributed to the pandemic seemed to reflect deeper disjunctures that had led students to an existential questioning of the purpose…
Descriptors: Community College Students, Student Attitudes, Educational Attitudes, Role of Education
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Kathrynn DiTommaso – Forum for International Research on Students and Teaching, 2024
This paper presents a qualitative study that used student interviews to investigate the influence of non-cognitive barriers on developmental student success in a corequisite first-year composition course that was offered on line following the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Students answered open-ended questions about their previous educational…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Writing Skills, College Freshmen, Online Courses
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Bell, Sophie R. – Composition Forum, 2021
This essay describes writing and conversations that took place in my First Year Writing class at St. John's University in Queens, New York. I analyze student responses to my invitation to consider more deeply--and wield more consciously--the language resources they bring into classrooms. I seek to understand the potential for their often deeply…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Racial Discrimination, Multilingualism, College Freshmen
Lindsey Albracht – ProQuest LLC, 2021
This project explores the recent paradigm shift within Writing Studies toward a translingual pedagogical approach, situating many of the critiques of this approach as limitations produced by dominant liberal models of Writing Studies pedagogy. Taking up Vershawn Ashanti Young and Frankie Condon's call to move toward a more anti-racist translingual…
Descriptors: Racism, Code Switching (Language), Higher Education, Writing (Composition)
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Ihara, Rachel – Journal of Basic Writing, 2020
This article argues that the national trend to replace developmental writing programs with mainstreaming and corequisite courses presents an important opportunity to reconsider writing goals and assessment practices for all students. This insight emerges in part from data collected over several semesters at one community college, which showed that…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Freshman Composition, Acceleration (Education), Educational Change
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Lane, Cary; Kim, Miseon; Schrynemakers, Ilse – Community College Journal of Research and Practice, 2020
In an effort to better understand how students' length of exposure to American secondary schools relates to academic performance in core, first-year college courses, this study surveyed and analyzed the demography, study habits, and grades of 267 freshman composition (ENG 101) students at a large, urban community college. Results indicated that…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Academic Achievement, Correlation, Freshman Composition
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Deniz Gokcora; Raymond Oenbring – Experiential Learning and Teaching in Higher Education, 2021
Collaborative Online International Learning (COIL) programs connect students at campuses in two or more different countries to investigate global realities from a cross-cultural perspective through asynchronous (e.g., digital forums) and/or synchronous (e.g., Zoom meetings) digital engagement. As many scholars have noted, COIL collaborations…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Global Approach, Electronic Learning, International Education
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Blaisdell, Bob – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2013
Vampires and a Moco Jumbie is a narrative-essay about teaching Basic Composition in New York City in the early 1990s. To the surprise and delight of the teacher, the students describe in class discussions and in their writings their beliefs in the supernatural. Contains one note.
Descriptors: Beliefs, Mythology, Essays, Student Attitudes
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Wilson, James – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2003
Describing the Harlem Riot of 1935, black author and poet Claude McKay wrote, "On Tuesday the crowds went crazy like the remnants of a defeated, abandoned, and hungry army. Their rioting was the gesture of despair of a bewildered, baffled, and disillusioned people". By nearly all accounts, the riot marks the historical end of the Harlem…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Research Methodology, Community Colleges, Literature