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Showing 1 to 15 of 168 results Save | Export
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Bethany Woollacott – Review of Education, 2025
For educational research findings to impact educational practice, effective communication is essential. One communication device is a summary that consolidates research literature and presents it in a practitioner-friendly format. There has been little research on how to design educational research summaries effectively, especially not for early…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Documentation, Literary Styles, Writing (Composition)
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Pollak, Calvin – Written Communication, 2021
Scholars in discourse studies have defined legitimation as the justification (and critique) of powerful institutions and their practices. In moments of crisis, legitimation tactics often shift. This article considers how such shifts are incited by unauthorized information leaks. Leaks, I argue, constitute freshly available texts that reveal…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Rhetoric, Access to Information, Public Agencies
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Olinger, Andrea R. – Written Communication, 2020
People communicate through language as well as visual embodied actions like gestures, yet audio remains the default recording technology in interview-based writing research. Given that texts and writing processes are understood to involve semiotic resources beyond language, interview talk should receive similar treatment. In this article, I…
Descriptors: Writing Research, Interviews, Video Technology, Human Body
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Zhou, Xiaodi; Hall, Jori N. – Journal of Mixed Methods Research, 2018
While writing from a qualitative tradition often occurs in first person and from a quantitative tradition often occurs in third person, the pros and cons of voice in mixed methods research needs consideration. This article argues for more inclusion of the first-person in such writing, particularly as evidence for the researcher's claims, as a way…
Descriptors: Mixed Methods Research, Writing (Composition), Form Classes (Languages), Academic Discourse
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Connors-Manke, Beth – CEA Forum, 2019
In face-to-face conversation, it's easy to react with shock and moralism to the incivility enabled by social media, easy to lament that we live in an era when communication has gone wrong. The digital era, however has also reinvigorated voice--both written and spoken--in other, less toxic, ways. We've seen a resurgence in oral composition (think:…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Listening Skills, Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition)
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Chatterjee-Padmanabhan, Meeta; Nielsen, Wendy; Sanders, Sarah – Higher Education Research and Development, 2019
Doctoral education scholars associate doctoral learning with certain threshold concepts, many of which are embedded in the literature review. In considering this, we draw from a literary metaphor of 'joining the conversation' and report on a doctoral writing programme that blended elements of workshops, 'shut-up-and-write' sessions and thesis…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Graduate Students, Literature Reviews, Writing (Composition)
Rillo, Richard M.; Alieto, Ericson O. – Online Submission, 2018
This study investigated and analyzed the prevalence and presence of indirectness markers in Korean and Persian English Essays. The researchers analyzed the prevalence of the indirectness markers as a set of politeness strategies employed by the Korean and Persian university bound students in their English compositions. Furthermore, the researchers…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, English (Second Language), Writing Instruction, Essays
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Huang, Cheng-Wen; Archer, Arlene – London Review of Education, 2017
Research on academic literacies has predominately focused on writing practices in higher education. To account for writing practices in the digital age, this paper emphasizes the importance of extending the focus of academic literacies beyond writing to include multimodal composition. Drawing on social semiotics, we put forward a framework for…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Writing (Composition), Multimedia Materials, Academic Discourse
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Fulford, Amanda – Educational Theory, 2016
In this paper Amanda Fulford addresses the issue of student writing in the university, and explores how the increasing dominance of outcome-driven modes of learning and assessment is changing the understanding of what it is to write, what is expected of students in their writing, and how academic writing should best be supported. The starting…
Descriptors: College Students, Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), Essays
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Sherry Seale Swain; Richard L. Graves; David T. Morse – English Journal, 2015
Picture a group of classroom teachers gathered around a table late one afternoon discussing the results of the statewide writing assessment, the returned scored papers scattered across the table top. This article details research exploring which rhetorical elements are associated with statewide assessment scores and considers the role and…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Standardized Tests, Scores, Writing (Composition)
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Cordi, Kevin D. – English in Texas, 2015
Investigating student voice in the classroom, the author suggests methods for integrating digital texts, both for student research and student writing. He recommends a variety of platforms that support digital storytelling and offers examples of student products and students' reflection on those products.
Descriptors: Story Telling, Technology Uses in Education, Critical Literacy, Writing (Composition)
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Anderson, Kate T.; Stewart, Olivia G.; Kachorsky, Dani – Written Communication, 2017
This article examines multimodal texts created by a cohort of academically marginalized secondary school students in Singapore as part of a language arts unit on persuasive composition. Using an interpretivist qualitative approach, we examine students' multimodal designs to highlight opportunities taken up for expanding literacy practices…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Educationally Disadvantaged, Language Arts
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Monahan, Mary Beth – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2013
This teacher-research study responds to the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) call for an integrated model of literacy that simultaneously builds deep content knowledge and develops students' proficiency in writing arguments in science. The author notes that while argument is a cornerstone of the CCSS writing standards, little attention is…
Descriptors: State Standards, Science Instruction, Persuasive Discourse, Writing (Composition)
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Carter, Susan – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2012
Using mythology as a generative matrix, this article investigates the relationship between knowledge, words, embodiment and gender as they play out in academic writing's voice and, in particular, in doctoral voice. The doctoral thesis is defensive, a performance seeking admittance into discipline scholarship. Yet in finding its scholarly voice,…
Descriptors: Mythology, Academic Discourse, Writing (Composition), Doctoral Dissertations
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Birch, Phil; Batten, John; Batey, Jo – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2016
The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of perceived student gender on the feedback given to undergraduate student work. Participants (n = 12) were lecturers in higher education and were required to mark two undergraduate student essays. The first student essay that all participants marked was the "control" essay.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Student Evaluation, Influences
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