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Higher Education | 67 |
Writing Evaluation | 67 |
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Bishop, Wendy | 2 |
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Battle, Mary Vroman | 1 |
Boiarsky, Carolyn | 1 |
Boone, Beth | 1 |
Bratcher, Suzanne, Ed. | 1 |
Brent, Douglas | 1 |
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White, Kathryn F.; Johnson, Betty S. – ABCA Bulletin, 1984
Reports the results of a study to determine grading criteria and evaluative standards used by a select group of business communication instructors. (AEA)
Descriptors: Business Communication, Course Content, Grading, Higher Education
Allen, Jo – Technical Writing Teacher, 1988
Describes a strategy whereby teachers allow students to determine the standards by which their writing will be judged, and, in doing so, convince students to share their beliefs about good writing. (ARH)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Secondary Education, Teaching Methods, Writing (Composition)

Brown, Roger S. – Die Unterrichtspraxis, 1982
Proposes that writing instruction at the intermediate level of second language study should be kept to a minimum. Gives examples of the kinds of brief derivative exercises that are most beneficial. (EKN)
Descriptors: German, Higher Education, Second Language Instruction, Writing Evaluation

Cohen, Alan S. – Exercise Exchange, 1984
Describes a final exercise that gives composition students a better sense of how they have grown as writers during the semester. Students review, edit, and make conclusions on their "selected works," preparing a manuscript-like folder. (HTH)
Descriptors: High Schools, Higher Education, Revision (Written Composition), Teaching Methods

Libbee, Michael; Young, Dennis – Journal of Geography, 1983
Research suggests that good writers differ from poor writers. Teachers who develop prewriting exercises, emphasize multiple draft assignments, help the student think about revision, and evaluate the product can help undergraduates write and think more clearly. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: Geography Instruction, Higher Education, Prewriting, Skill Development

Klein, Julie – Exercise Exchange, 1983
Outlines a technique for improving student writing across the disciplines through postwriting evaluation sessions. (FL)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Integrated Activities, Interdisciplinary Approach, Revision (Written Composition)

Gruenler, Sheryl – Exercise Exchange, 2000
Describes a writing assignment which allows students to exercise creativity communicating set facts while utilizing narrative techniques covered in class (sentence variety, dominant impressions, narrative action, detailing, etc.), and in which peers judge how effectively and consistently the information was communicated, illuminating the…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Higher Education, Secondary Education, Student Attitudes

Homer, David – English in Australia, 2001
Describes a summer writing course by presenting a diary embellished with writing exercises, a course guide, a list of writing activities that can be taken as starters, and assessments. Discusses how each participant is asked to create a text about a city which has a considerable visual presence, and to explore stereotypical and mythical versions…
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Higher Education, Instructional Innovation, Journal Writing
Meade, Martin J. – 1983
It is possible to use writing assignments in college psychology courses as a means of teaching subject matter and writing without substantially increasing instructor workload. There are two sets of strategies for dealing with the problem of limited time and energy, one pertaining to the writing assignment itself, the other to evaluating such…
Descriptors: Educational Strategies, Evaluation Methods, Higher Education, Psychology
Norman, Rose; Young, Marynell – Technical Writing Teacher, 1985
Presents a sequence of assignments that provides an inductive method for preparing students to write a formal proposal by imitating the grant review and proposal process. Describes the process and results of peer review of the resulting proposals.(HTH)
Descriptors: Grants, Higher Education, Peer Evaluation, Program Proposals

Roemer, Kenneth M. – College English, 1984
Advocates modeling as an appropriate approach to teaching composition, provided teachers select models carefully and present them as paradigms of dynamic processes and as hints leading to avenues of discovery. Uses N. Scott Momaday's "The Way to Rainy Mountain" to illustrate how such a model can be used to assist student invention. (RBW)
Descriptors: College English, Higher Education, Models, Writing Evaluation

Butler, Sydney – English Quarterly, 1981
Outlines a program in journal writing and self-assessment for college students. (AEA)
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Higher Education, Prewriting, Program Descriptions

Warren, Thomas L. – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1982
Describes the writing of the formal technical report as a project for students in technical writing courses. Includes grading criteria for such a report. (HTH)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Teaching Methods, Technical Writing, Two Year Colleges
Banschbach, John – 1995
Stephen Tchudi, among others, argues that the distinction between expository writing and creative writing is finally a false distinction. Louise Rosenblatt explains that whether readers are reading creative writing or expository writing, they expect the experience of reading to provide them with both information and pleasure. A corollary of these…
Descriptors: College Sophomores, Creative Writing, Expository Writing, Higher Education
Brent, Douglas – 1982
The latest perceptions of writer-audience relationships have not been applied to what teachers actually do in the classroom. When the idea of audience is applied at all, it is often misapplied, resulting in classroom activities that fail to facilitate learning and many, in some cases, that force students to perform tasks so unreal that credibility…
Descriptors: Feedback, Higher Education, Interdisciplinary Approach, Models