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Jesús García Laborda; Teresa Magal Royo; Slavka Madarova – South African Journal of Education, 2024
The use of artificial intelligence in foreign language teaching, and particularly in teaching writing, is still under investigation for its potential positive impact and potential benefits. So far, the focus was on controversial uses, due to the challenges for the teachers. However, when used just for learning purposes, it can be a facilitating…
Descriptors: Taxonomy, Artificial Intelligence, Writing Instruction, Second Language Learning
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Michael Burkhard – International Association for Development of the Information Society, 2023
Due to the advances of artificial intelligence (AI) and natural language processing, new AI-powered writing tools have emerged. They can be used by students among other things for text translation, to improve spelling or to generate new texts. In academic writing, AI-powered writing tools are posing challenges but also opportunities for teaching…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Writing (Composition), Writing Processes, Writing Strategies
Bilotta, Juliane – ProQuest LLC, 2023
This dissertation considers how English for Academic Purposes (EAP) instructors can reimagine notions of academic writing by exploiting multimodal texts in ways that invite students' fuller language repertoires into the classroom. Using ethnographic data collected during the Spring 2022 semester of a college EAP class, this study argues that a…
Descriptors: Culturally Relevant Education, English for Academic Purposes, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
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Wyatt, Jonathan; Gale, Ken – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2018
We have developed an approach to collaborative-writing-as-inquiry that we sometimes refer to as "between the twos". Increasingly, we came to understand that the only way to continue in our process was to "write to it"; whatever the question, the query or the problem, it was this inducement--"write to it"--that led to…
Descriptors: Collaborative Writing, Writing Instruction, Writing Processes, Teaching Methods
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Wittek, Anne Line – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 2018
This article addresses writing in higher education with the primary aim of conceptualizing writing as a mediational tool. The conceptual framework consists of three concepts: "learning trajectories," "mediation," and "recontextualization." The article describes how writing can work as a mediational tool and suggests…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Writing Processes, Writing Instruction, Higher Education
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Boyd, Vic; Wilson, Colin; Smith, Christopher – Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice, 2023
The concepts of 'graduateness' and graduate attributes became contested terrain before COVID-19 destabilised even the most assured of shared learning constructions. Indeed, for those of us immersed in the delivery of work-based learning (WBL), this has long been the case. Promotion of reductive notions of 'skills' acquisition to comply neatly with…
Descriptors: Reflection, Workplace Learning, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique), Metacognition
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Tuvachit, Vorakorn; Soontornwipast, Kittitouch – Arab World English Journal, 2018
This study aims to find whether the adapted approaches of writing instructions and alternative assessment could improve the students' academic writing ability. This classroom-based action research was initiated from the observation and reflection of the researchers as English academic writing instructors in tertiary education. It was observed that…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Alternative Assessment, Teaching Methods, Writing Skills
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Stanley, Sarah – Journal of Basic Writing, 2018
Against a Racial Real backdrop, I argue for consciously adopting a sociocultural approach to style in linguistically and racially diverse Basic Writing classrooms. To make this argument, I focus on a multilingual writer named Tejada, who reveals how she had internalized a racialized stereotypical discourse about herself as a minority--a discourse…
Descriptors: Student Diversity, Writing Instruction, Basic Writing, Multilingualism
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Cheung, Kevin Yet Fong; Elander, James; Stupple, Edward James Nairn; Flay, Michael – Studies in Higher Education, 2018
Research on authorial identity has focused almost exclusively on the attitudes and beliefs of students. This paper explores how academics understand authorial identity in higher education. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with professional academics and analysed using thematic analysis, identifying themes at two levels. At the semantic…
Descriptors: Authors, Teaching Methods, Semantics, Student Attitudes
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Manchón, Rosa M., Ed. – Language Learning & Language Teaching, 2020
The current volume aspires to add to previous research on the connection between writing and language learning from a dual perspective: It seeks to reflect current progress in the domain as well as to foster future developments in theory and research. The theoretical postulations contained in Part I identify and expand in novel ways the diverse…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Carr, Allison – Composition Forum, 2013
In this essay, I propose a concerted effort to begin devising a theory and pedagogy of failure. I review the discourse of failure in Western culture as well as in composition pedagogy, ultimately suggesting that failure is not simply a judgement or indication of rank but is a relational, affect-bearing concept with tremendous relevance to…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Failure, Writing (Composition), Instruction
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Driscoll, Dana Lynn; Powell, Roger – Composition Forum, 2016
Drawing from a five-year longitudinal data set following thirteen college writers through undergraduate writing and beyond, we explore the impact of students' emotions and emotional dispositions on their ability to transfer writing knowledge and on their overall writing development. Participants experienced a range of emotions concerning their…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Longitudinal Studies, Mixed Methods Research, Writing Across the Curriculum
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Medvedeva, Maria; Recuber, Timothy – College Teaching, 2016
An essay's motive or research problem consists of the rhetorical moves illuminating why that essay matters--what puzzling elements of a primary source it resolves, which contradictions in the data it explains, or what gaps in the literature it fills. This article invites college instructors to dedicate some of their classroom time to teaching…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, College English, Writing Skills, Writing (Composition)
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White-Farnham, Jamie – Composition Studies, 2012
WRT 302: Writing Culture is an upper-level elective in the Department of Writing and Rhetoric at the University of Rhode Island (URI). As part of a group of four 300-level courses, Writing 302 draws many junior and senior majors in Writing and Rhetoric, English, and other majors who are looking to add creativity and experience with design to their…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Rhetoric, Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction
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Raymond, Laurel; Quinn, Zarah – Writing Center Journal, 2012
The writing center where the authors were trained and currently work emphasizes the model of non-directive, writer-based peer tutoring in which, as Jeff Brooks puts it, tutors "make the student the primary agent in the writing center session." As undergraduate peer tutors, they recognize that some students come into their writing center with goals…
Descriptors: Writing Processes, Laboratories, Tutors, Peer Teaching
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