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Welch, Kathleen E. – 1987
Autobiographical writing can, by its nature as expressive discourse, connect to the residual orality and literacy that students possess before they enter college writing classes, because it crosses more easily between the spoken word and the written word than other forms of writing. Adapting the Ong-Havelock orality-literacy thesis to writing…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Higher Education, Literacy, Peer Evaluation
Stewig, John Warren – 1985
Noting that too many children leave elementary school without developing the ability to use words imaginatively, this paper presents a teaching approach that uses literature to foster invention in children's writing. The approach described is part of a total composition program that structures writing experiences in which children observe…
Descriptors: Child Language, Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Expressive Language
Butler, Andrea; Turbill, Jan – 1984
Integrated approaches to the teaching of reading and writing being used in classrooms in Australia and New Zealand are described in this booklet. The first part of the booklet presents theoretical background on how children learn to talk and the reading and writing processes. The second and third parts of the booklet describe ways of putting…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Integrated Curriculum, Interdisciplinary Approach, Reading Instruction
Rager, John J. – 1986
The writing process depends heavily on linguistic, psycho-perceptual, and psycho-motor abilities. If a student has a significant weakness in one of these major trait clusters, then thinking will suffer and he or she may experience great difficulty in writing. The process of writing can be broken down into four main phases, which can be labeled…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Models, Remedial Instruction, Revision (Written Composition)
Gibbons, Virginia; Leibman, Suzanne – 1984
Four techniques are suggested for tutoring students of English as a second language in writing: taking a "writing history" of the student's experiences, failures, and successes at writing by asking open-ended questions in a non-judgmental way during an informal interview; brainstorming about a given writing topic, with the tutor taking close notes…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Second Language Instruction, Teacher Student Relationship, Teaching Methods
Crowhurst, Marion – 1988
Existing evidence suggests that students do less well in writing argument than they do in writing narrative reports, and the reasons for the poorer performance are complex and interactive. In some ways argument is more cognitively demanding than narrative, but lack of experience in persuasive writing, and the interrelated nature of the writing…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Elementary Secondary Education, Narration, Persuasive Discourse
Andrews, Paul E.; And Others – 1989
A study examined whether a writing style called "dialogue writing" would allow children to use conversational cues to write longer papers in the same amount of time as free writing. Subjects were 54 sixth graders (about 12 years old) in 3 classrooms in rural neighborhoods--one class consisted of children with learning difficulties.…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Grade 6, Intermediate Grades, Rural Schools
Upton, James – 1987
In order for students to be helped effectively to complete their writings successfully, writing centers in schools need to become more adept at "context based response." That is, writing centers need to focus not just on clarity and correctness of writing but also on the content of the assignment that students are working on. This type…
Descriptors: Secondary Education, Teaching Methods, Writing Evaluation, Writing Exercises
Reynolds, Mark – 1982
Freewriting can be more than merely a prewriting heuristic that provides preparation for more advanced kinds of writing. A class at Jefferson Davis State Junior College (Alabama) attempts to promote the lack of pressure as well as the freedom and spontaneity that freewriting allows to a traditional composition course. In this class, freewritings…
Descriptors: Instructional Improvement, Instructional Innovation, Prewriting, Sequential Approach
Escoe, Adrienne S., Ed. – SWRL Instructional Improvement Digest, 1981
Sentence combining can teach students one of the most difficult aspects of the writing process--how to construct effective, versatile sentences. In sentence combining exercises, students take a series of short sentences and combine them into a longer and more elaborate sentence in such a way that the important information from each short sentence…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Secondary Education, Sentence Combining, Sentence Structure
Christensen, Linda, Ed.; And Others – 1983
Noting that the writer's journal is both a memory bank for observations and a nonthreatening means of exploring language, this guide offers individual classroom strategies for making the journal a valuable writing instruction tool. Following an introduction, the guide is divided into sections as follows: (1) philosophy of journals in the…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Language Usage, Models, Teacher Role
Peer reviewedHewitt, Henry C. – Science and Children, 1974
Discusses the use of the "Science Journal" by elementary school children as a means of developing effective writing skills and in helping to individualize the science classroom. (JR)
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Elementary School Science, Individualized Instruction, Instruction
Peer reviewedDyer, Boyd Kimball – Journal of Legal Education, 1974
Describes a new writing course in which the professor teaches only one class a week as a lecture to the entire first year class, and the class emphasis is on practice. (Author/KE)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Law Schools, Legal Education, Student Participation
Aubrey, James R. – 1981
Increasing numbers of teachers seem to recognize that sequencing assignments is an effective way to teach writing. A sequence of 20 writing assignments was developed by four composition instructors at the United States Air Force Academy in Colorado. The first eight exercises asked cadets to look at and think about their physical surroundings at…
Descriptors: College English, College Freshmen, Higher Education, Sequential Approach
Fregly, Marilyn S.; Detweiler, John S. – 1981
In addition to introducing students to the basic skills of public relations writing, a public relations course should move students toward public relations "thinking" and provide them with tangible evidence to demonstrate their writing talents to a prospective employer. One such course begins with a brainstorming exercise that lends…
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Higher Education, Mass Media, Public Relations


