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Lofty, John – Freshman English News, 1989
Describes an initial writing assignment given to college freshmen that asks them to describe their experiences as writers. Argues that responses give the instructor preliminary information concerning students' assumptions, values, and attitudes about writing. Includes excerpts from a questionnaire that helps students recall their previous writing…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Questionnaires, Student Attitudes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Guiher-Huff, Susan – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1990
Describes a freshman composition class in which students write essays about pollution. Explains that students classified and divided problems, cited examples, explored pollution's processes, used narrative, and offered comparisons. Describes how students prepared cause-and-effect oral presentations and then wrote persuasive letters. Concludes that…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Persuasive Discourse, Pollution, Research Papers (Students)
Thompson, Mark – 1989
A study investigated the effects of Writing Across The Curriculum (WAC) on 23 freshman students concurrently enrolled in composition and history classes at the University of Oklahoma to determine whether the treatment affected student scores on essay exams, student achievement in the courses overall, and student attitudes about the influence of…
Descriptors: College English, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, History Instruction
Willey, R. J. – 1988
Before students are able to write fairly original, successful, critical essays on literature, they need to become experienced members of the audience for whom they will write, sharing fully the social context of critical writing by becoming part of an interactive, interpretive community. This reader-response technique appears to be the best…
Descriptors: College English, Critical Reading, Critical Thinking, Essays
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Brooke, Robert – College Composition and Communication, 1988
Suggests an alternative understanding of imitation, according to which a student learns by imitating another person, rather than a text or process. Proposes that composition teaching works when it effectively models an identity which students can accept. (MS)
Descriptors: College English, Directed Reading Activity, English Instruction, Freshman Composition