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Lauren Mark; Shannon K. McManimon – Teaching in Higher Education, 2025
We propose inviting the body into the university writing process through somatic pedagogical practices. This study investigates an effort to write from our body and through our body in a course where students used the body as a site of creation. Challenging mind-body dualism and the erasure of bodily ways of knowing, students participated in…
Descriptors: Human Body, Writing Processes, Writing Instruction, Perception
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Alimsiwen Elijah Ayaawan; Gordon S. K. Adika – Teaching in Higher Education, 2023
The importance of academic literacy acquisition through enculturation in higher education is self-evident. Important within the processes of enculturation is how interactants are positioned. This study examines how interactants within the writing classroom of a higher education institution in Ghana are positioned through dialogue. Data for this…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition)
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Brock, Caroline; Sanchez, Ninive; Sharpe, Deanna L. – Teaching in Higher Education, 2020
This study examines how seventeen writing intensive instructors at a Midwestern, public university used writing as a mode of learning about complex, sensitive, and challenging issues across the disciplines. For their students, the pen effectively became a bridge to the development of critical thinking skills, greater self-awareness, and a deeper…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, College Faculty, Writing Instruction, Diversity
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Benzie, Helen Joy; Harper, Rowena – Teaching in Higher Education, 2020
Academic literacies research emphasizes the importance of social context for understanding student writing development in higher education. In particular, students' choices of textual practices are shaped by perceptions of disciplinary norms and institutional expectations. In contemporary online learning environments, however, student writing is…
Descriptors: Academic Language, Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods, Student Attitudes
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Danvers, Emily; Hinton-Smith, Tamsin; Webb, Rebecca – Teaching in Higher Education, 2019
The paper explores questions of power arising from feminist facilitators running a doctoral writing group at a UK university. Butler's [2014. Re-thinking Vulnerability and Resistance. [Online]. Accessed September 12, 2017.…
Descriptors: Power Structure, Feminism, Doctoral Programs, Writing (Composition)
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Canton, Ursula; Govan, Michelle; Zahn, Daniela – Teaching in Higher Education, 2018
Academic Literacies, the most influential conceptual framework for writing practitioners at UK universities, is closely related to widening participation. At the same time, writing support is often justified with the argument that written communication is among the most important employability skills for graduates. While these concepts are often…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Literacy Education, Foreign Countries, College Faculty
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Brooke, Mark; Monbec, Laetitia; Tilakaratna, Namala – Teaching in Higher Education, 2019
This paper comprises findings from three parallel case studies within the broad framework of English for Academic Purposes (EAP). These provide results from classroom-based action research conducted over two years working with Semantics, Specialisation and axiological cosmologies from Legitimation Code Theory (LCT). Each author shares how one or…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, English for Academic Purposes, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
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McGrath, Lisa; Kaufhold, Kathrin – Teaching in Higher Education, 2016
Academic Literacies and English for Specific Purposes perspectives on the teaching of academic writing tend to be positioned as dichotomous and ideologically incompatible. Nonetheless, recent studies have called for the integration of these two perspectives in the design of writing programmes in order to meet the needs of students in the…
Descriptors: Literacy, English for Academic Purposes, Workshops, Anthropology
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Badenhorst, Cecile; Moloney, Cecilia; Rosales, Janna; Dyer, Jennifer; Ru, Lina – Teaching in Higher Education, 2015
Graduate writing is receiving increasing attention, particularly in contexts of diverse student bodies and widening access to universities. In many of these contexts, writing is seen as "a problem" in need of fixing. Often, the problem and the solution are perceived as being solely located in notions of deficit in individuals and not in…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Writing (Composition), Case Studies, Masters Programs
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Elton, Lewis – Teaching in Higher Education, 2010
The genre of academic writing is discipline dependent, so that neither specialists in academic writing nor practising academics in a discipline can, independently of each other, provide students with the necessary help to develop the ability to write in their academic disciplines. Furthermore, the rules are largely tacit, i.e. they are not…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Discipline, Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Borg, Erik; Deane, Mary – Teaching in Higher Education, 2011
In a highly competitive higher education environment where resources are limited, educators are increasingly concerned with providing evidence for the effectiveness of teaching interventions including one-to-one writing support. This article offers a model for analysing the changes in student writing as a result of individualised writing…
Descriptors: Evidence, Teaching Methods, Evaluation Methods, Higher Education
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Fernsten, Linda A.; Reda, Mary – Teaching in Higher Education, 2011
This article shares strategies that educators can use to assist students in meeting the challenges of academic writing more effectively. In order to foreground an understanding of struggling writers, the text begins with a brief review of composition theory and history related to basic writers and identity. It goes on to examine classroom…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Writing Processes, Writing Instruction, Academic Discourse
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Cotterall, Sara – Teaching in Higher Education, 2011
Writing occupies a key role in doctoral research, because it is the principal channel students use to communicate their ideas, and the basis on which their degree is awarded. Doctoral writing can, therefore, be a source of considerable anxiety. Most doctoral candidates require support and encouragement if they are to develop confidence as writers.…
Descriptors: Communities of Practice, Doctoral Programs, Graduate Students, Writing (Composition)
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Avery, Simon; Bryan, Cordelia – Teaching in Higher Education, 2001
Describes a course called "Varieties of Speaking and Writing" at Anglia Polytechnic University; the course teaches language skills through study of extracts from literary and non-literary writing. Addresses fundamental pedagogical issues: how to improve undergraduate writing skills, how to train and assess speaking skills, and how to…
Descriptors: College Instruction, College Students, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
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Gunn, Victoria A. – Teaching in Higher Education, 2000
Describes a medieval history access course at the University of Glasgow (Scotland) in which non-traditional teaching methods were used, specifically collaborative group work and embedded rhetorical training for essay writing. Questions the idea of discipline-specific pedagogical practice. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Higher Education, Intellectual Disciplines
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