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Lucia, Brent – Composition Forum, 2021
The writing process has helped define students as autonomous writers within the composition classroom. Yet, our writing identities are not stable and shift throughout the writing process. I argue that composition instructors should enhance students' awareness to their own dynamic, writing subjectivities through a more expansive view of rhetorical…
Descriptors: Rhetorical Invention, Writing Processes, Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction
Connors-Manke, Beth – CEA Forum, 2019
In face-to-face conversation, it's easy to react with shock and moralism to the incivility enabled by social media, easy to lament that we live in an era when communication has gone wrong. The digital era, however has also reinvigorated voice--both written and spoken--in other, less toxic, ways. We've seen a resurgence in oral composition (think:…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Listening Skills, Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition)
Amy Lee Marie Locklear – ProQuest LLC, 2020
Synthesis is one of the most cognitively demanding practices novice writers must undertake, and research demonstrates that first-year students' synthesis writing practices result in more knowledge "telling" rather than knowledge creation and transforming. Pedagogies used to teach synthesis often focus on developing text-building…
Descriptors: Concept Mapping, Rhetorical Invention, Synthesis, Cognitive Processes
Richards, Daniel P. – Composition Forum, 2017
This article argues that the field of Rhetoric and Composition has long harnessed the active potential of metaphor to change its own practices but has considerably overlooked student use of metaphor--a particularly urgent oversight given the metaphorical battleground that constitutes the discourse of contemporary higher education. Using this…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Rhetoric, Rhetorical Invention, Higher Education
Hamilton, Heidi – Communication Teacher, 2017
Courses: Persuasion; Persuasive Speaking. Objectives: Students will demonstrate the ability to apply persuasive concepts in constructing persuasive messages creatively, and students will present and analyze their persuasive messages.
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Creative Thinking, Rhetorical Invention, Rhetorical Criticism
Basgier, Christopher – Composition Forum, 2017
To illustrate how genre pedagogy and public writing pedagogy can inform one another, this program profile describes the second-semester composition course at University of North Dakota, ENGL 130: College Composition II: Writing for Public Audiences. In this course, genre works as a rhetorical bridge across an interlinked sequence of research,…
Descriptors: Literary Genres, Writing (Composition), College English, Institutional Characteristics
Lawrence, Samuel G. – Communication Teacher, 2015
A fundamental challenge that all public speakers face is getting and keeping the attention of audiences. Because audiences absorb large amounts of talk with little chance of taking the floor, the potential for inattentiveness and boredom is significant. In conversational interchanges, the brief duration of speaking turns and regular transfers of…
Descriptors: Public Speaking, Audience Awareness, Audience Analysis, Class Activities
Dainville, Julie; Sans, Benoît – Educational Research and Reviews, 2016
Since July 2013, our research team has been working on a project that aims at re-introducing rhetorical exercises in Belgian secondary (high) schools and at studying their effects on the pupils. Our hypothesis is that the regular practice of rhetorical exercises, inspired by those practised in Antiquity, could stimulate skills like…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Teaching Methods, Experimental Curriculum, Writing (Composition)
Foster, Rachel – Teaching History, 2015
Long, unreadable sentences in her students' essays led Rachel Foster to improve her post-16 students' punctuation. Her journey resulted, however, in more than improved punctuation. It led her to theorise what historians are really doing in their "signpost sentences". She found herself showing students how an academic historian…
Descriptors: Punctuation, Essays, History Instruction, Historical Interpretation
King, Mark – Teaching History, 2015
Setting out to teach Magna Carta to the full attainment range in Year 7, Mark King decided to choose a question that reflected real scholarly debates and also to ensure that pupils held enough knowledge in long-term memory to be able to think about that question meaningfully. As he gradually prepared his pupils to produce their own causation…
Descriptors: Essays, History Instruction, Writing Strategies, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique)
Cooper, A. Kat; Oliver-Hoyo, M. T. – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2016
Argument construction is a valuable ability for explaining scientific phenomena and introducing argumentation skills as part of a curriculum can greatly enhance student understanding by promoting self-reflection on the topic under investigation. This article aims to use argument construction as a technique to support an activity designed to…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Rhetorical Invention, Scientific Literacy, Scientific Principles
McAvoy, Paula; Hess, Diana – Educational Leadership, 2014
Too often, the authors assert, discussion of controversial issues in high school classrooms is channeled through the teacher, rather than engaging students in discussion with one another. Teachers fear that students won't know how to talk to one another productively about issues, or that they'll end up in shouting matches. But when…
Descriptors: Debate, Discussion, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Controversial Issues (Course Content)
Pabuccu, Aybuke; Erduran, Sibel – International Journal of Science Education, 2017
There exists bias among students that learning organic chemistry topics requires rote learning. In this paper, we address such bias through an organic chemistry activity designed to promote argumentation. We investigated how pre-service science teachers engage in an argumentation about conformational analysis. Analysis of the outcomes concentrated…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Persuasive Discourse, Preservice Teachers, Preservice Teacher Education
Orth, Simon; Lacey, Daniel; Smith, Neil – Teaching History, 2015
On 9 April 1930, a philanthropist called Edward Harkness donated millions of dollars to the Phillips Exeter Academy in the USA. He hoped that his donation could be used to find a new way for students to sit around a table with their teacher and "feel encouraged to speak up". This led to the development of what is now known as the…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, History Instruction, Teaching Methods, Reading Habits
Siu, Fiona Kwai-peng – Online Submission, 2016
This study aims to explore the effectiveness of a paradigm to teach native Cantonese-speaking university students the hierarchical structure of expository prose to improve paragraph coherence. Most of the diagnostic argumentative essays the participants in this study wrote in the course were incoherent, failing to meet readers' expectation of…
Descriptors: Rhetorical Invention, Paragraph Composition, Writing Strategies, Writing Skills