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Elena Taylor – Journal on Empowering Teaching Excellence, 2023
Reflection is a necessary component of learning. Through reflective assignments and tasks, students are given opportunities to evaluate their learning and analyze strategies they use while acquiring and applying course material. Reflections also help students assess and think deeply about the information presented in class and thus better retain…
Descriptors: Reflection, Writing Instruction, Writing Exercises, Student Attitudes

Clark, William G. – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1977
Suggests that student's expression in composition will improve by daily journal writing. (HOD)
Descriptors: College Freshmen, English Instruction, Journal Writing, Teaching Methods

Tichenor, Mercedes; Jewell, Mary Jean – Reading Improvement, 1996
Provides a framework for using journal writing in the primary grades to develop writing skills. Outlines techniques to help focus teacher observations, deepen insights, inform curricular decision making, and help teachers reflect upon the student's role in journal writing. (RS)
Descriptors: Journal Writing, Primary Education, Teaching Methods, Writing Exercises

Ritchie, Joy S. – Journal of Advanced Composition, 1990
Describes an undergraduate women's literature course in which students write in journals. Argues that the course may resolve conflict between feminist teachers, who dislike some theorists' uncritical view of feminism, and theorists, who dislike the taint of male philosophy in feminist teaching. Suggests that course interaction can bridge these…
Descriptors: Feminism, Higher Education, Journal Writing, Literature Appreciation
Jeffers, Laurie A. – Learning, 1994
Teachers can use dialog journals to inspire their students to write. Such a method allows students to write and teachers to answer without worrying about red marks or negative comments. The article suggests topics to get students writing and ideas for encouraging students to write. (SM)
Descriptors: Dialog Journals, Elementary Education, Interpersonal Communication, Journal Writing
Caggiano, Lynn Mondello – Teaching Pre K-8, 2004
As an elementary reading specialist, Lynn Mondello Caggiano, the author of this article, often worked with students who struggled with reading and other language tasks, including writing. After working with a group of students for whom written expression was particularly difficult, Caggiano came up with the plan of having the students draw their…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Writing Strategies, Writing Instruction, Student Journals

Gaustad, Martha Gonter; Messenheimer-Young, Trinka – Teaching Exceptional Children, 1991
A demonstration writing project involving 97 primary through secondary students with learning disabilities is described. Students developed journals containing ongoing written dialogues with teachers, who also corrected student errors through examples in their own responses. Procedures, integration with writing curriculum, and results of journal…
Descriptors: Dialog Journals, Elementary Secondary Education, Journal Writing, Learning Disabilities
Price, Marian W. – 1987
The reader-response journal has proven useful in the literature-based composition class; it is also useful in the literature survey at the sophomore or junior level of college. Survey courses have a standard protocol that students have come to expect. In these classes, the teacher is an expert who lectures on historical background, trends, and…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Journal Writing, Literary Criticism, Literature Appreciation
Richards, Patricia A. – 1995
Research suggests that the informal language of journals is very important. Language scholars such as J. Vygotsky (1962), J. Moffell (1968, 1982), P. Elbow (1973, 1982), and M. Shaughnessy (1977) believe that human beings find meaning through exploration in their own talking language. To add to the evidence in this area, a study conducted in an…
Descriptors: Dialog Journals, Free Writing, Grade 3, Journal Writing

Borasi, Raffaella; Rose, Barbara J. – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 1989
Discusses the educational value of engaging mathematics students in writing a journal. Provides a table showing the relationship between writing topics and the potential benefits. (Author/YP)
Descriptors: College Mathematics, Content Area Writing, Higher Education, Journal Writing
Paley, Vivian Gussin – 1989
The classroom setting is a source for daily and creative writing material for teachers as well as students. Teacher and student writing samples help to illustrate classrooms as cultures-in-the-making in which new rules are invented every day and suggest that stories of classroom life must of necessity end in question marks and untied threads.…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Class Activities, Classroom Environment, Classroom Research
Bardine, Bryan A. – 1995
Using a writing journal with adult literacy students is an effective way to introduce them to writing while working with their reading, self-esteem, and confidence levels. One type of journal that combines the skills of reading and writing is the reader response journal. In these journal exercises, the students read a story or section of a story…
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Adult Literacy, Dialog Journals, Journal Writing
Jacobson, Jeanne M. – 1989
The advantages of using journals in the college classroom are their versatility and their transferability to teaching at every level. Three types of journal writing are very effective in engaging students in purposeful, repeated writing: individual journals in which student and teacher maintain a written dialogue throughout the course; class…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Cooperative Learning, Expository Writing, Group Activities
Ford, Michael P. – 1990
A graduate reading course provided students a hands-on experience in using dialog journals with elementary school children to illustrate the value of integrating writing opportunities into reading programs. Every week of the semester reading methods students read, responded, and returned the journals to the cooperating elementary classes. Only…
Descriptors: Dialog Journals, Elementary Education, Higher Education, Interschool Communication
Robinson-Armstrong, Abbie – 1991
Research indicates that student journal writing promotes the development of independent thinking as well as writing skills. Journal writing helps students comprehend course material, relate course content to their own lives, and prepare for class discussions. Instructors who use journal writing to help students achieve instructional objectives are…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Journal Writing, Reading Skills
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