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Wenger, Paul E.; Fischbach, Robert M. – Association for Communication Administration Bulletin, 1983
Describes an interdisciplinary effort that combines instruction in fundamentals of speech communication and English composition. (PD)
Descriptors: Course Content, Higher Education, Interdisciplinary Approach, Speech Communication

Liggett, Sarah – College Composition and Communication, 1984
Presents annotations of materials representing the range of current cross-disciplinary theories and research connecting speaking and writing. Topics range from cognitive psychology, linguistics, and rhetoric to learning theory. (HTH)
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Higher Education, Learning Theories, Oral Language

Rafoth, Bennett A.; Rubin, Donald L. – WPA: Writing Program Administration, 1992
Explores the reasons why speech and writing are taught independently of each other. Discusses some advantages of integrating the two curricula. Offers options for organizing courses. Provides examples of programs and resources. Describes a survey of writing program administrators regarding whether they integrate speech and writing curricula. (PRA)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Higher Education, Integrated Curriculum, Speech Communication
Collins, Alexandra – 1982
Writing and speaking are so closely integrated that educators can no longer continue to isolate them for separate study. Students can benefit from the teaching of writing and speaking simultaneously in that they learn to develop personal expression in more than one medium and gain a sense of immediate feedback. By recognizing that meaning implies…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Higher Education, Integrated Activities, Speech Instruction

Dannels, Deanna P.; Anson, Chris M.; Bullard, Lisa; Peretti, Steven – Communication Education, 2003
Notes that communication across the curriculum initiatives face multiple curricular and pedagogical challenges that are especially appropriate for investigation within a scholarship of teaching and learning framework. Examines technical classes that emphasize speaking and writing. Indicates that students were resistant toward the incursion of…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Chemical Engineering, Communication Skills, Educational Change
Bangs, Terry L. – 1985
One way of giving students a sense of audience in their writing is to combine speech communication and written communication in the classroom. If students can be taught to write as they talk, they can perceive their audience to be real people rather than the amorphous "indefinite other" they typically write for in the traditional writing…
Descriptors: Assignments, Higher Education, Integrated Activities, Persuasive Discourse
Harper, Nancy L. – 1981
Noting that the formal split between instruction in written and oral modes of communication is a relatively recent one, this paper presents arguments against that split--at both the secondary school and the college level--and arguments for instruction in communication. The paper offers a historically based definition of communication, positing…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Higher Education, Integrated Activities, Program Content
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
Charry, Myrna; Morton, Elaine – 1984
To help students organize and integrate new information with past knowledge, college reading teachers can offer students cognitive schemata that sort information into general and specific concepts. Without this ability, students will be unable to comprehend, analyze, synthesize, interpret, or transfer information. In addition, they will be unable…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Higher Education

Klugh, Henry E. – Teaching of Psychology, 1983
Describes a program that gives psychology students practice in written and oral communication. It involves students in writing an abstract of a journal article and in making an oral presentation. Writing and speaking skills, along with methodology, may be the most enduring legacy of introductory psychology courses. (CS)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Higher Education, Interdisciplinary Approach, Psychology
Beadle, Mary E.; Perrico, Ralph – 1990
Departmental lines can interfere with collaboration among academic colleagues. Working together within the same department, a speech teacher and a writing teacher realized that both speech and writing have preparatory (planning and development), performance, and evaluation stages, and that within the various stages students use the same or similar…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Cooperative Learning, Higher Education, Interdisciplinary Approach

Hagaman, John A. – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1986
Argues that since students often articulate their meaning in speaking better than they can in writing, teachers should improve their awareness of speech and writing connections. Describes such relationships and suggests teaching strategies using speech to improve writing. Covers group composition, reading aloud, transcribing prewriting…
Descriptors: Assignments, Class Activities, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Fritz, Paul A.; Weaver, Richard L., II – 1984
Noting that while the literature clearly states a need for colleges and universities to teach students critical thinking skills from a liberal arts perspective, this paper points out that there are few descriptions of how these skills can be taught. Using the canons of classic rhetoric, the literature is reviewed to discover the skills that arise…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Course Content, Critical Thinking, Educational Philosophy
Goldstein, Richard M.; Nelson, Charles W. – 1984
Members of the English and speech faculty at Michigan Technological University combined and coordinated their ideas to find a way to introduce the basics of oral communication into the composition course. The course itself is structured according to the quarter system, in which basic composition is taught in the first term, research methods and…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Curriculum Development, Curriculum Enrichment, Dormitories
Tarver, Jerry – 1983
The content of a good speech writing course includes an explanation of the function and impact of speech writers, an examination of speeches produced by professional writers, and a focus on the sharpening of students' writing skills. The content must also be balanced between the practical/professional and the abstract/academic aspects of the…
Descriptors: Education Work Relationship, Higher Education, Literary Styles, Public Speaking
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