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Showing 1 to 15 of 28 results Save | Export
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Snider, Zachary – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2013
The use of Creative Writing methodologies and techniques in university Composition classes has recently become an element of contention, namely questioning whether or not creativity for composition and rhetoric curriculum is detrimental or productive for student learning. This essay discusses the beneficial aspects of using Creative Writing form,…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Age Groups, Generational Differences, Writing (Composition)
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Hains-Wesson, Rachael – Higher Education Research and Development, 2013
In this article, the author asserts that whether we write creatively or academically (or both) it takes time to understand the reasons why we "want" to write, and the more we write, the more we fully begin to appreciate why we have to write in the ?rst place. From an early age, nearly every day, Rachel Hains-Wesson actively participated in…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Reflective Teaching, Transformative Learning, Audience Awareness
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Santos, Marc C.; McIntyre, Megan M. – Composition Forum, 2016
This article details how we integrate Jody Shipka's approach to creativity and rhetorical awareness into a Professional Writing, Rhetoric, and Technology major at the University of South Florida. We situate Shipka's pedagogy alongside postpedagogy, differentiating the latter from postcomposition. In short, we argue that postpedagogy echoes…
Descriptors: Creativity, Rhetoric, Technical Writing, Writing Skills
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Koehler, Adam – College English, 2013
This article identifies and examines a digital arm of creative writing studies and organizes that proposal into four categories through which to theorize the "craft" of creative production, each borrowed from Tim Mayers's "(Re)Writing Craft: Composition, Creative Writing, and the Future of English Studies": process, genre, author, and…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Handicrafts, Creative Writing, Rhetorical Invention
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Saunders, Lesley – London Review of Education, 2012
This reflective piece--written primarily to provoke discussion--raises some questions about and for the recent "creativity agenda" in educational policy in England, suggesting that something fundamental is missing. The author argues that "creativity" has characteristically been defined in recent policy discourse as a set of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Auditory Stimuli, Creativity, Creative Writing
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Arnott, Luke – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2012
"Unraveling Braid" analyzes how unconventional, non-linear narrative fiction can help explain the ways in which video games signify. Specifically, this essay looks at the links between the semiotic features of Jonathan Blow's 2008 puzzle-platform video game Braid and similar elements in Georges Perec's 1978 novel "Life A User's Manual," as well as…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Form Classes (Languages), Novels, Creative Writing
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McCann, Thomas M.; D'Angelo, Rebecca; Hillocks, Marjorie; Galas, Nancy; Ryan, Laura – English Journal, 2012
Writing, reading, and dramatic performance have long been powerful means for representing and contending with thorny problems, and the authors see much promise in engaging students in authoring the dramas and solutions that represent their fears and their hopes for resolutions. In this article, the authors share a series of writing activities and…
Descriptors: Personal Narratives, Writing (Composition), Writing Skills, Writing Processes
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Zarnowski, Myra; Turkel, Susan – Journal of Children's Literature, 2012
In the March/April issue of "The Horn Book Magazine," author and editor Marc Aronson wrote a lightening rod of an essay about nonfiction literature. In the article, he claimed that some "new" nonfiction is groundbreaking because it shows "new knowledge as it is taking shape" (2011, p. 57). He referred to authors of this new nonfiction as…
Descriptors: Nonfiction, Grade 5, Rhetorical Invention, Inferences
Burns, Elizabeth; Webber, Carlie – School Library Journal, 2009
Fanfiction is a world wherein fans create stories using characters, settings, and events from their favorite books, movies, or television shows. In fanfiction, all offstage events are possible, whether they take place before, during, or after the established action. There's no denying that fanfiction has a bad rep in some schools. For starters,…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Fiction, Creative Writing, Rhetorical Invention
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Powell, Vonda – Communication Teacher, 2012
As public relations professions advance toward new media platforms, one traditional tool--the backgrounder/position paper (more technically termed white paper) remains a compelling vehicle to impart enduring professional competencies. Moreover, the skills requisite to produce a white paper can be deployed in a variety of new and traditional media…
Descriptors: Evidence, Research Papers (Students), Technical Writing, Class Activities
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Marsh, Charles – Written Communication, 2007
Advertising may be the most pervasive form of modern rhetoric, yet the discipline is virtually absent in rhetorical studies. This article advocates a mutually beneficial rapprochement between the disciplines--both in academe and the workplace. Rhetoric, for example, could help address an enduring lacuna in advertising theory. Persuasive…
Descriptors: Heuristics, Advertising, Rhetorical Invention, Intellectual Property
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Deifell, David C. – Communication Teacher, 2007
This article presents a public speaking assignment that takes the study of rhetoric seriously. First, it shifts the approach from the common typology of informative, persuasive, and ceremonial speeches toward forensic, deliberative, and epideictic rhetoric. Second, this assignment takes rhetoric seriously by generating the understanding that all…
Descriptors: Public Speaking, Assignments, Rhetoric, Rhetorical Invention
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Pacanowsky, Michael – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1988
Demonstrates that fiction can stand as a form of scholarly writing by blurring the genres of scholarship and fiction. (RAE)
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Academic Standards, Creative Writing, Fiction
Snipes, Wilson – Freshman English News, 1988
Argues that digressiveness enables the effective writer to avoid the limitations of the small thesis statement and to explore freely thought and experiences. Describes several kinds of digression, including: Platonic thesis; structural; the example "digressio"; figurative; modification; monistic; allusive; and Dali. (RS)
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Literary Devices
Miller, Lori Ann – 1990
A creative writing class explored the feminine creative powers evoked when searching for the Muse in an attempt to understand women as writers. Female student writers occasionally found "masculine" figures, but predominantly experienced a figure of the Muse that had a distinctly Goddess-linked quality or was not genderized at all.…
Descriptors: Consciousness Raising, Creative Writing, Females, Feminism
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