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Dirk, Kerry – Composition Forum, 2012
The treatment of a research paper as an isolated utterance within a composition classroom is problematic in that such papers may fail to encourage transfer of writing knowledge. In this essay, I argue that a research paper's failure to work as a utterance situated within a conversation--as critiqued through a framework constructed by Mikhail…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Writing (Composition), Writing Processes, Course Descriptions
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Ruecker, Todd – Composition Studies, 2011
English 1311: Expository English Composition is the first semester course in a two-semester first-year composition (FYC) sequence. Both ENG 1311 and its second-semester counterpart, ENG 1312, are required for all students unless they have transfer credit covering this requirement or place out of one or both of the courses via the College-Level…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Rhetoric, Rhetorical Criticism, Higher Education
Hess, Mickey – Composition Studies, 2000
Presents a course design of English 102: Intermediate College Composition. Describes this course as the second of two written communication courses required of undergraduates at the University of Louisville. Notes the goal of this course was to dissuade first-year writers from a limited outlook without debasing the education out of which it grew.…
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Instructional Innovation
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Spear, Shelley; And Others – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1990
Describes a year-long core humanities course at Washington State University in which freshman composition is linked to a world civilizations context. Explains how the linked course aims to prepare students for the writing and thinking tasks they need for other courses in college and after they graduate. (MG)
Descriptors: Core Curriculum, Course Content, Course Descriptions, Freshman Composition
Hindman, Jane E. – 1993
Two graduate students teaching a required first-year composition course at the University of Arizona designed a classroom environment in which they could explore with students the invisible rules governing black and white people's notions of what constitutes "appropriate" communication. In many ways, their efforts at this large, public…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Course Descriptions, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
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Cox, Michelle – 2001
This paper describes how freshman composition teachers can provide students with tools for integrating different classes and navigating the university experience by introducing students to discourse community theory and viewing freshman composition as a foundation for Writing Across the Curriculum (WAC). It begins by describing how discourse…
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Discourse Communities, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Warner, Mary – 1998
First-year composition courses (particularly the semester course devoted to exposition, argumentation, and research) were the site at Western Carolina University for an alliance between professors and librarians as they attempted to integrate information literacy. Librarians developed six modules to teach "The Big Six Skills Approach to…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Course Descriptions, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
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Dahlin, Amber – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1994
Describes a program of English instruction focusing on having students prepare the syllabus for a second-semester English composition course. Claims that letting students create their own course syllabus increases student investment in learning. Outlines the way one teacher carried out such a method. Includes a student-written syllabus. (HB)
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Course Content, Course Descriptions, English Instruction
Ryan, Jack – 1997
A model for an integrative first-year writing class, combining American native writing, field experience, and the fundamental trappings of a composition class, are examined in this paper. Students can learn to respond to environmental issues in creative ways and explore issues that they will face in their lives. In addition to a combined…
Descriptors: Conservation (Environment), Course Descriptions, Environment, Environmental Education
Nydahl, Joel – 1992
Babson College (a school of business and management in Wellesley, Massachusetts) attempted to make a group of first-year students computer literate through "clustering." The same group of students were enrolled in two courses: a special section of "Composition" which stressed word processing as a composition aid and a regular…
Descriptors: Business Education, Computer Literacy, Course Descriptions, Electronic Mail
Cecil, Donald; Koester, Susan H. – 1998
This paper asserts that by removing speech and rhetoric from the "English" department and making composition a stepchild of literature, Harvard and Johns Hopkins Universities ultimately made it much more difficult for writing instructors today to capitalize on the strong physical underpinnings that speech and rhetoric provide to writing.…
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Instructional Innovation
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Lovas, John – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2001
Describes two different experiments at De Anza College which illustrate coordinated teaching, a concept in which a group of faculty volunteer to work together for better instruction within the context of an existing program, maintaining their usual approaches to teaching a course, but allowing for collegial effort, some common work, and…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Cooperative Planning, Course Descriptions, Freshman Composition
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Rubin, Lois; Hebert, Catherine – College Teaching, 1998
A discussion of collaborative peer teaching as a method of college instruction looks at theoretical support for the approach and describes experiences with three courses using it: freshman composition; American studies; and international diversity. Perceived benefits of the experiences for both teachers and students are examined. (MSE)
Descriptors: Active Learning, American Studies, Classroom Techniques, College Instruction
Thelin, William – 1992
"Politically correct" is a pejorative label applied to activities that in some way question, subvert, or threaten the dominant power structure. In discussing how best to educate students, some composition professionals assume that the composition classroom can be made apolitical. Freshman English, like all classes, is politicized…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Course Descriptions, Course Organization, Cultural Context
Dunn, Patricia – 1993
By linking a first-year writing class and an introductory chemistry class at Utica College of Syracuse University (Syracuse, New York) the instructor hoped to foster camaraderie among the students; help students see the connections between the two disciplines; and disrupt students' pattern of unquestioning acceptance of the authority of the…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Class Activities, College Freshmen, Course Descriptions
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