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Elise Antoinette Green – ProQuest LLC, 2021
Drawing on a multiple-case, embedded design (Yin, 2018), I highlight the in-depth differences and similarities that exist across students' experiences in first-year composition (FYC), looking specifically at whether learners used genre and rhetorical situation as threshold concepts to transfer writing-related knowledge and skills across the…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Freshman Composition, Fundamental Concepts, Writing Across the Curriculum
Hayes, Hogan; Whithaus, Carl – Composition Forum, 2022
Discourse-based interviews allow researchers to gather data about a writer's understanding of what informs a task. This method was essential for a research team seeking to understand the impact of programmatic learning objectives on student writing development. Three decisions in the approach to this research project sought to center the student…
Descriptors: Writing Research, Writing (Composition), Writing Processes, Writing Skills
Christopher Iverson – ProQuest LLC, 2020
This study explores the effects of community engagement on college writers years after completing first-year composition courses with service-learning partnerships. Since the 1990's, scholarship has connected service-learning pedagogy and the gains that student writers stand to enjoy when writing for audiences beyond the classroom and purposes…
Descriptors: Service Learning, Instructional Effectiveness, Writing Instruction, Rhetoric
Jankens, Adrienne; Latawiec, Amy Ann – Composition Forum, 2021
In this article, we argue that using students' reflective writing to understand specific aspects of their classroom experience requires that researchers systematically integrate into the curriculum reflections that responsibly attend to both students' learning and the focus of classroom research. Informed by recently published articles on…
Descriptors: Reflection, Writing (Composition), Student Experience, Cooperative Learning
Omar Ahmed Yacoub – ProQuest LLC, 2023
The Purpose of this dissertation is to explore undergraduate Computer Science (CS) students' writing processes and transfer as they occur in the process of completing a writing assignment in a CS course. In particular, I observe and analyze students' writing processes, and investigate examples of writing knowledge transfer from prior and…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Computer Science Education, Majors (Students), Transfer of Training
Zak Lancaster – College Composition and Communication, 2016
Gerald Graff and Cathy Birkenstein's writing textbook, "They Say / I Say," has triggered important debates among writing professionals. Not included within these debates, however, is the empirical question of whether the textbook's templates reflect patterns of language use in actual academic discourses. This article uses corpus-based…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction, Textbooks, Textbook Content
Zachary C. Beare; Marcus Meade – College Composition and Communication, 2015
Through an analysis of student writing and interviews, this article examines hyperbole as a neglected rhetorical device. The authors trouble notions of hyperbole as error and argue for a--reconceptualization of hyperbole as potentially highly communicative and able to convey emotional tone, passion, and significance while maintaining brevity.
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Discourse Analysis, Rhetoric, Writing Strategies
Matsuda, Paul Kei; Saenkhum, Tanita; Accardi, Steven – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2013
First-year composition in U.S. higher education has been a major site of L2 writing research. Despite the historical division between mainstream first-year composition and L2 writing, there has been an increasing interest in integrating insights from L2 writing research into the professional literature in rhetoric and composition and writing…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Freshman Composition, Writing Research, Educational Research
Bailey, Christine I. – ProQuest LLC, 2014
Drawing upon a postmodern ethnographic approach, the modes of inquiry into this qualitative study included observation and data analysis in order to represent a particular community of students: first year college freshmen from a mid-size, religiously-affiliated university in the southern United States. The methods included artifact…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Creative Writing, Writing Research, Postmodernism
Carter, Shannon; Dunbar-Odom, Donna – Kairos: A Journal of Rhetoric, Technology, and Pedagogy, 2009
The Converging Literacies Center (CLiC) is a deeply integrated model for writing programs, bringing together the writing center, first-year writing, basic writing, professional development activities, graduate coursework, and research activities to re-imagine and support twenty-first-century literacies. What is unique about CLiC is not merely the…
Descriptors: College Programs, Models, Writing (Composition), Laboratories
Hayes, John R.; And Others – Quarterly of the National Writing Project and the Center for the Study of Writing and Literacy, 1995
Evaluates four writing samples from each student in several freshman composition courses. Finds that students did not perform consistently from one assignment to the next. Suggests that knowing how well a student performs on one writing task says very little about how well the student is likely to perform on other writing tasks. (RS)
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Reliability, Student Evaluation
Varnum, Robin – 1994
Much existing historiography is either based too exclusively on the evidence of old textbooks or concerned too narrowly with theory or the epistemological assumptions underlying theory. Those who study the history of composition in this century need both to consult such new sources of information as course materials, student papers, and oral…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Curriculum Design, Educational History, Freshman Composition
Stolarek, Elizabeth A. – 1991
Three studies examined the effectiveness of teaching an unfamiliar prose form using prose modeling (duplicating defining characteristics of a model text using different content). First, English department instructors at four universities were surveyed and of the 70 who responded, 76% stated that they did use modeling in their classrooms. In the…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Instructional Innovation
Clark, Beverly Lyon; Clark, Roger D. – Writing Program Administration, 1990
Argues that standardized tests can provide limited guidance, in conjunction with student writing samples, in the decision whether students should be exempted from freshmen writing courses. Suggests that students who write well but whose performance is unstable can be affected, positively or negatively, by exemption results. Suggests that students'…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Standardized Tests, Student Placement
Sirc, Geoffrey – Freshman English News, 1989
Examines gender differences in topic choice by analyzing freshman writers' narratives of an incident they witnessed. Finds that pronounced, gender-based patterns influence text production, with women demonstrating caring and nurturing values in everyday life and men engaging in romantic fantasies of self-aggrandizement or apocalyptic fascination…
Descriptors: Descriptive Writing, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Sex Differences