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Sealey-Morris, Gabriel – Composition Studies, 2015
While comics have received widespread acceptance as a literary genre, instructors and scholars in Rhetoric and Composition have been slower to adopt comics, largely because of a lingering difficulty understanding how the characteristics of the form relate to our work in the classroom. Using as guides the "WPA Outcomes Statement for First-Year…
Descriptors: Literary Genres, Writing (Composition), Rhetoric, Classroom Environment
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Swiencicki, Jill; Fosen, Chris; Burton, Sofie; Gonder, Justin; Wolf, Thia – Liberal Education, 2011
What lasting impact could a required general education writing course have on students' well-being? The authors examined this question in the context of the California State University- Chico Town Hall Meeting, a campus event sponsored jointly by the Academic Writing Program and the First-Year Experience Program from 2006 to 2009. In the Town…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Teaching Methods, Academic Discourse, Writing Instruction
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Bardine, Bryan Anthony; Fulton, Anthony – Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies, Issues and Ideas, 2008
In this article, the authors examine the role revision memos played in composition classrooms. Both authors used the memos to help students reflect on their writing and continue revising. The memos also served as guides for the instructors as they responded to their students' writing. The memos were a reminder that the instructors needed to focus…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Revision (Written Composition), Process Approach (Writing), Advance Organizers
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Lindemann, Erika – College English, 1995
Provides discussion and critical analysis of three key models for teaching freshman composition courses. Discusses approaches centered on writing as product, writing as process, and writing as system. Considers what might be the common ground that these three approaches to writing instruction share. (HB)
Descriptors: English Instruction, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Models
Chestek, Virginia L. – 1994
Writing in Western culture requires mastery of both rhetorical theory and the expressive writing often promoted in composition studies, however great the conflict between them might be. The tension between these two poles can even be a source of excitement and motivation. Landmark composition studies such as those of James Britton and Janet Emig…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Audience Awareness, English Departments, Freshman Composition
Hashimoto, I. – Freshman English News, 1989
Argues that little is known about the teaching of writing beyond what good teachers have always known: that some students learn without teachers; that some students learn if they are given simple assignments, have their papers read with respect, and are taught the few simple things that can be demonstrated simply. (RS)
Descriptors: Educational Trends, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness
Gale, Fredric G. – Freshman English News, 1991
Argues that writing is customarily taught by methods guaranteed to produce as little meaning as possible. Shows that current pedagogies are more limited than they need to be. Argues for a new paradigm, related to information theory, which allows new ideas about how meaning is expressed in communications. (SR)
Descriptors: College English, College Freshmen, Free Writing, Freshman Composition
Siebert, Bradley G. – 1993
Kenneth Burke has continued to exert a profound influence on recent theories of composition and rhetoric, specifically on how writing might be taught in the classroom. Two recent composition textbooks, "Process, Form, and Substance: A Rhetoric for Advanced Writers" by Richard Coe and "Writing Is Critical Action" by Tilly…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Models, Process Approach (Writing)
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Scott, J. Blake – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1997
Offers a supplementary approach to teaching literacy narratives that builds on the work of M. Soliday and others but is centered in student production. Outlines specific strategies for teaching the literacy narrative in the first-year composition classroom. Discusses possible benefits of teaching the student production of literacy narratives.…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Instructional Effectiveness, Instructional Innovation, Narration
Westcott, Warren; Ramey, Betty – 1993
A difficult task facing college English departments is the creation of a freshman English program that is coherent and theoretically sound and which allows instructors a certain flexibility. Recently, the English department at Francis Marion College undertook a major revision of its freshman program with these goals in mind. The result was a…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, English Curriculum, English Instruction, Freshman Composition
Flower, Linda; Higgins, Lorraine – 1991
A study explored the constructive, collaborative process of a group of writers under circumstances which throw light on dimensions of meaning making. The writers were college freshmen receiving "process instruction" and working collaboratively in a writing course. Collaborative planning is a loosely structured planning process in which…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Cooperative Learning, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Davis, Wesley K. – 1990
This comparative study evaluated the writing growth of 97 college freshman before and after instruction to determine if a process-centered mode of teaching had a more significant impact than a traditional form-centered mode of instruction on discourse coherence in composition. The study used a pretest/posttest, quasi-experimental design with both…
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Coherence, Comparative Analysis, Connected Discourse
Fischer, Ruth Overman – 1997
Students entering the university have to create a space for themselves, not only in the writing classroom, but in their relationships with faculty, other students, and their evolving selves. A curricular support mechanism helps students enlarge their educational process. Such a support system, the Linked Courses Program, has been in operation at…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Educational Environment, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Aghbar, Ali-Asghar; Alam, Mohammed – 1992
A study investigated the effectiveness of full dyadic writing as a technique for teaching writing to students of English as a Second Language (ESL). Subjects were 31 college students of diverse cultural backgrounds enrolled in ESL sections of freshman English. Each chose a partner with a different native language with whom to write two essays, the…
Descriptors: Classroom Research, Classroom Techniques, Collaborative Writing, College Students