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Schuster, Charles I. – Writing Instructor, 1984
Discusses situational sequencing, a concept of teaching writing that places writers within specific rhetorical contexts and asks them to produce a series of writings that develop from and relate to one another. Provides examples of such assignments. (FL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Individual Development, Sequential Approach
Aubrey, James R. – 1981
Increasing numbers of teachers seem to recognize that sequencing assignments is an effective way to teach writing. A sequence of 20 writing assignments was developed by four composition instructors at the United States Air Force Academy in Colorado. The first eight exercises asked cadets to look at and think about their physical surroundings at…
Descriptors: College English, College Freshmen, Higher Education, Sequential Approach
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Kiniry, Malcolm; Strenski, Ellen – College Composition and Communication, 1985
Describes a system for arranging assignments in a composition course that aims to prepare students for academic writing, by focusing entirely on exposition and its conceptual demands. (HTH)
Descriptors: Content Area Writing, Course Content, Curriculum Development, English Curriculum
Haisty, Donna – Writing Instructor, 1984
Discusses the sequencing of writing assignments based on students' natural development. Cites the work of Piaget and Moffett. (FL)
Descriptors: Assignments, Cognitive Processes, Developmental Stages, Educational Philosophy
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Prince, Michael B. – College English, 1989
Offers a practical curriculum for the composition classroom which takes into account a socially informed sequence of work. Argues that every student possesses a socially constituted generic lexicon which functions as a complex code of verbal behavior. Urges teachers to establish mediating links between familiar and unfamiliar generic contexts.…
Descriptors: College English, Cultural Context, Curriculum Design, Discourse Modes
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Pytlik, Betty P.; Bergdahl, David – Exercise Exchange, 1987
Provides eight sequential, process-oriented writing assignments: (1) diagnostic essay, (2) personal account, (3) ghost writing, (4) summary, (5) developing a thesis, (6) exploratory essay, (7) proposal, and (8) final paper. (HTH)
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Expository Writing, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Fortune, Ron; Neuleib, Janice – 1984
With support from the National Endowment for the Humanities, writing teachers at three central Illinois high schools, a community college, and Illinois State University (ISU) are addressing the problem of getting composition teachers to cooperate in developing long range curricula and sharing actual classroom practices through a collaborative…
Descriptors: College School Cooperation, Curriculum Development, Curriculum Enrichment, Higher Education
Bisson, Lillian M. – 1981
Seeking to involve students more actively in their writing assignments, two teachers developed a group of sequential writing assignments with an interdisciplinary emphasis for students in an advanced writing course. The goal of these writing assignments was to give students who had solved most of their mechanical writing problems a chance to…
Descriptors: Assignments, College Students, Higher Education, Integrated Activities
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Smith, Louise Z. – College English, 1984
Gives recommendations for sequencing writing assignments in courses structured by genre or definition, by chronology, and by theme. (CRH)
Descriptors: College English, Course Content, Curriculum Enrichment, Discourse Analysis
Comprone, Joseph J. – 1981
Writing can be taught most effectively when teachers build the disorienting characteristics of reading literature into the inventive stages (prewriting and revision) of writing literary interpretations. The reading of literature and the process of composing interpretive essays are both different and similar. They are similar because they are both…
Descriptors: College English, Critical Reading, Expository Writing, Higher Education
Popham, Rae Jeane; Zarem, Janet – 1978
The classroom-tested ideas for teaching writing described in this booklet are based on the beliefs that writing is a teachable skill, that it is a process with constituent steps, and that students need evaluation at each stage of writing. Following an introduction that identifies eight steps in the writing process and discusses class organization,…
Descriptors: Data Collection, Evaluation Criteria, Higher Education, Learning Activities
Saxton, Ruth O. – 1987
The implicit assumption behind personal writing assignments given at the beginning of a writing course is that personal essays eliminate the writing apprehension of having nothing to say. However, college freshmen find it very difficult to write about themselves and their own opinions because this writing involves abstract mental processes and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College English, Course Content, Expository Writing