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Tompkins, Gail E. – Language Arts, 1980
Offers a method for teaching penmanship whereby the different strokes of a penmanship exercise are used to illustrate the action in a story. Presents some story lines and shows how they may be adapted to imaginative penmanship drills that will hold the children's interest. (HTH)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Handwriting Instruction, Teaching Methods, Writing Exercises
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Dot, Gary K. – Language Arts, 1975
Advertisements can be effective stimuli for creative writing.
Descriptors: Advertising, Creative Writing, Elementary Education, Publicize
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Turner, Thomas N. – Language Arts, 1978
Suggests several teaching techniques which encourage creative independent writing by providing needed structure. (DD)
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Elementary Education, Self Expression, Teaching Methods
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Carson, John F. – Language Arts, 1976
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Elementary Education, Teaching Methods, Writing (Composition)
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Whitin, David J. – Language Arts, 1984
Presents excerpts of letters written by children to their favorite children's authors, discussing how the letter writing experience parallels authors' experiences. Also presents responses from some of the authors. (HTH)
Descriptors: Authors, Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Letters (Correspondence)
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Edelsky, Carole; Smith, Karen – Language Arts, 1984
Discusses the differences between inauthentic and authentic writing, arguing that most writing in school is inauthentic, because it is written for someone else's intentions. Examples are cited from a classroom with an essentially whole language orientation, but which occasionally reverts to inauthentic writing assignments. (HTH)
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Elementary Education, Teaching Methods, Writing Exercises
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Blake, Howard; Spennato, Nicholas A. – Language Arts, 1980
Describes a "directed writing activity" that teachers can use in developing writing sessions that consistently produce good results. Outlines six steps in the writing activity: prewriting, framing the writing assignment, writing the assignment, revising the draft, editing, and writing the final draft. (AEA)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Language Arts, Teaching Methods, Writing (Composition)
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Jacobs, Suzanne E. – Language Arts, 1984
Describes a way to teach children the research paper through personal discovery without constraints that usually compel them to copy from reference books. The process demonstrates that organizational schemes for children are intuitive, and that teachers can show children how to use peer response groups during their writing to aid in…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Peer Teaching, Student Research, Teacher Role
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Tway, Eileen – Language Arts, 1980
Recounts a teacher's involvement with students in the spontaneous process of learning to write. Presents the benefits of such an approach as preferable to conventional structured methods of writing instruction. (HTH)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Teacher Response, Teacher Role, Teaching Methods
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Newman, Judith M. – Language Arts, 1987
Examines a number of language activities in educational software, noting that most focus on surface structure and conventions, thus closing off students' options rather than expanding them. Discusses how, by improvising with word processors, teachers can tailor activities to help students explore and reflect on their reading and writing…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Computer Software, Elementary Education, Reading Instruction
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Tompkins, Gail E. – Language Arts, 1982
Writing researchers suggest that children should write stories in order to (1) entertain, (2) foster artistic expression, (3) explore the functions and values of writing, (4) stimulate imagination, (5) clarify thinking, (6) search for identity, and (7) learn to read and write. (HTH)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Cognitive Development, Creative Development, Creative Writing
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Graves, Donald H. – Language Arts, 1989
Focuses on letter writing as a way of evaluating children's growth as responders to fiction. Points out that not all children will enter into letter writing with equal success but concludes that it is a potentially powerful tool for teaching and learning. (MG)
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Fiction, Letters (Correspondence)
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Mikkelsen, Nina – Language Arts, 1985
Discusses how one teacher used writing--her own writing as well as that of her graduate students--to learn, about student interests, their writing attitudes, and what a writer really is. Describes the use of dialogue journals, use of excerpted entries for class handouts, and the use of writing for more constructive student assessment. (HTH)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Language Arts, Student Evaluation, Teacher Education
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Staton, Jana – Language Arts, 1988
Reports on dialogue journals as effective writing tasks which bridge the gap between spoken conversation and the traditional tasks of essay and report writing. Suggests that the use of dialogue journals improve classroom management and discipline, while creating an individual tutorial relationship of both an academic and personal nature. (MM)
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Classroom Environment, Elementary Secondary Education, Literacy Education
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Samway, Katharine – Language Arts, 1986
Laments the discrepancy between the process approach to reading and writing instruction advocated in research and the skills approach manifested in homework assignments. Decries the unsatisfactory role this kind of homework forces parents to assume. (HTH)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Homework, Language Arts, Parent Attitudes