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Devet, Bonnie – College Composition and Communication, 1988
Argues that students can be made more aware of language used in the "real" world by introducing them to figures of speech. (MS)
Descriptors: College English, Figurative Language, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Lenhart, Gary – Teachers & Writers, 1998
Discusses four poems by William Carlos Williams used to teach creative writing to college students. Uses "Portrait of a Woman in Red" and "The Last Words of My English Grandmother" because they contain speakers who are clearly not the poet, which gives undergraduate students opportunities to discuss details Williams uses to…
Descriptors: Characterization, Creative Writing, Figurative Language, Higher Education
Catron, Douglas M. – 1982
Metaphors, figures of speech of one sort or another, similes, and analogies are not strangers to technical writing. Four exercises that seem typical of most technical writing syllabi and that seem appropriate points for the introduction of students to metaphors and other figures are (1) a technical description, which requires the student to…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Higher Education, Imagery, Literary Devices

Vogt, Leonard – Exercise Exchange, 1978
Suggests a series of exercises designed to help students see the value of concrete writing, to help give new life to metaphors, and to encourage concrete evaluations of abstractions. (TJ)
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Higher Education, Imagery, Secondary Education
DePoy, Phillip – Teachers & Writers, 1997
Presents a three-part exercise that deals with poetic excess: heightened exaggeration of deliberately conflicting ideas. States that part 1 deals with hyperbole, part 2 with paradox, and part 3 with combining hyperbole and paradox in a single poem. Gives examples of students' poems using the technique. (PA)
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Higher Education, Paradox, Poetry

Gordon, Helen H. – College Composition and Communication, 1988
Suggests clustering can help students of any ability level draw upon latent images and ideas, generate more original sentences, and experiment with metaphor and simile. (MS)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Cluster Grouping, Elementary Secondary Education, English Instruction
Bernays, Anne; Painter, Pamela – 1995
This book is designed to be a how-to-write-fiction guide that is long on specifics and short on theoretical material. Each section of the book deals with a separate element of fiction--characterization, dialogue, point of view, plot, etc. Every exercise in the book is introduced in an opening paragraph, followed by instructions for completing the…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Elementary Secondary Education, Fiction, Figurative Language
Dunning, Stephen; Stafford, William – 1992
Written for those who want to write poems but are not sure how to start, this book presents 20 short exercises plus short pieces ("written talk") about poetry. The exercises in the book are designed to be completed in about 10 weeks. The types of poems in the 20 exercises include "found" and "headline" poems (which…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Creative Writing, Figurative Language, Higher Education
Glover, Polly S. – 1995
This essay considers the many benefits of journal writing. It explains how one person learned, during a 26-mile commute, to talk into a tape recorder slowly, leaving sizable pauses between phrases to facilitate transcription later on; how journal writing is a way to catch moments in the day, to describe a scene or to make connections that one…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Figurative Language, Higher Education, Journal Writing