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Anne Ruggles Gere; Anne Curzan; J. W. Hammond; Sarah Hughes; Ruth Li; Andrew Moos; Kendon Smith; Kathryn Van Zanen; Kelly L. Wheeler; Crystal J. Zanders – College Composition and Communication, 2021
Critical language awareness offers one approach to communal "justicing," an iterative and collective process that can address inequities in the disciplinary infrastructure of Writing Studies. We demonstrate justicing in the field's pasts, policies, and publications; offer a model of communal revision; and invite readers to become agents…
Descriptors: Metalinguistics, Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), Justice
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Kolln, Martha – College Composition and Communication, 1986
Explores the usage and grammatical agreement problems of the words "everyone" and "everybody." (HTH)
Descriptors: Grammar, Higher Education, Language Styles, Language Usage
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Smith, Allen N. – College Composition and Communication, 1976
As custodians of the past, teachers have an obligation to teach edited American English. (DD)
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Higher Education, Nonstandard Dialects, Standard Spoken Usage
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Sklar, Elizabeth S. – College Composition and Communication, 1988
Examines the rule that indefinite pronouns (everyone, anybody, each, someone, nobody) take singular verbs and singular pronouns for agreement. Explores its past, proposes a revision of the rule, and suggests modifications in its application based on analysis of its actual use in English. (SR)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Language Research, Pronouns, Standard Spoken Usage
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College Composition and Communication, 1984
Presents four essays disagreeing with Farrell's efforts to refute Arthur R. Jensen's genetic explanation of Blacks' lower scores on IQ tests. Presents Farrell's response to these essays. (HTH)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Education, Cultural Differences, Genetics
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Wible, Scott – College Composition and Communication, 2006
This essay examines a Brooklyn College-based research collective that placed African American languages and cultures at the center of the composition curriculum. Recovering such pedagogies challenges the perception of the CCCC's 1974 "Students' Right to Their Own Language" resolution as a progressive theory divorced from the everyday…
Descriptors: Curriculum Research, Writing Instruction, African Americans, Black Dialects
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Fisher, John C. – College Composition and Communication, 1970
Descriptors: Language Instruction, Nonstandard Dialects, Pattern Drills (Language), Social Bias
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Sternglass, Marilyn S. – College Composition and Communication, 1975
Use of dialect literature increases student awareness of dialect features and reduces the occurrence of such features in student writing.
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Creative Writing, Dialects, English Curriculum
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Kelly, Lou – College Composition and Communication, 1974
If we want monority students to be able to speak out effectively for their rights, we must teach them, without destroying their own voices, to use language that cannot be labeled substandard. (JH)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, College Students, Editing, Grammar
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Musgrave, Marian E. – College Composition and Communication, 1971
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Bias, Black Education, Black Students
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Pixton, William H. – College Composition and Communication, 1974
While a student's intimate speech is his own business; not teaching him to speak and write standard English will seriously handicap him in his future life. (JH)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, College Students, Language Standardization, Linguistics
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College Composition and Communication, 1974
This special report presents the resolution on language adopted by members of the Conference on College Composition and Communication in April 1974, and the background statement explaining and supporting the resolution. The statement includes answers to some of the questions the resolution might raise, such as: What is meant by dialect? Why and…
Descriptors: College Students, Elementary School Students, English Instruction, Language Usage
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Farrell, Thomas J. – College Composition and Communication, 1983
Points out the untestability of a heredity explanation for the differences in IQs of Black children and those of White children. Suggests an environmental explanation, arguing that Black children, simply have not had the opportunity to develop their potential for abstract thinking. (HTH)
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Black Youth, Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education
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Harris, Joseph – College Composition and Communication, 1989
Examines problems in the use of the term "community," including: (1) vague descriptions of community, without rules or boundaries; (2) its foreignness to students, raising questions about why students should learn it; and (3) its tendency to polarize writing theorists into community and individual camps. (JAD)
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Community Characteristics, Cultural Differences, Cultural Influences
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Cohen, Savin – College Composition and Communication, 1965
A teacher's developing awareness of his college students' dependence on jargon as the expression of their culture is portrayed with the aid of quotations from Eliot's "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock." Parallels are drawn between Prufrock's attitudes and student language in the classroom. (AF)
Descriptors: College Students, Cultural Awareness, Cultural Images, Cultural Traits
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