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Vale, Geraldine R. – English Journal, 1988
Proposes to improve spelling at the high school level by incorporating it into the writing process, using computers to the best advantage, and fostering the improvement of both critical and creative thinking skills. (MS)
Descriptors: Computer Literacy, Creative Thinking, Critical Thinking, Secondary Education
Robertson, Karen; Randolph, Linda – Teaching PreK-8, 1995
Offers guidelines on helping young children develop into independent writers. Explains what to expect at different stages, such as semiphonetic and phonetic stages, drawing as a prewriting activity, and writing and revising once drawing no longer dictates writing. Offers suggestions for providing an environment that supports the writing process.…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Free Writing, Primary Education, Teaching Methods
Edmonds, Mabel T.; Harris, Elaine – Teaching PreK-8, 1995
Describes the Reading/Writing Task, a procedure used to assess what students recall and comprehend from their reading but that also guides them to recall, summarize, and react to what they have read. Discusses the activities involved in the task and the evaluation procedure, and outlines the Reading/Writing Task scoring framework. (TJQ)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Reading Comprehension, Recall (Psychology), Student Evaluation
Buczinsky, Teresa – Teachers and Writers, 1991
Offers six prompts to use in teaching creative writing at the high school level. Explains how the prompts are used in the classroom. (MG)
Descriptors: Creative Writing, High Schools, Teaching Methods, Writing Exercises
Bernays, Anne; Painter, Pamela – 1995
This book is designed to be a how-to-write-fiction guide that is long on specifics and short on theoretical material. Each section of the book deals with a separate element of fiction--characterization, dialogue, point of view, plot, etc. Every exercise in the book is introduced in an opening paragraph, followed by instructions for completing the…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Elementary Secondary Education, Fiction, Figurative Language
Townsend, Julie E. – 1994
The most powerful and profound thoughts known to humankind are the result of freedom to write whatever it is that the soul must purge; whatever a person is thinking that troubles him or her; anything that hinders his or her ability to be in that particular moment of living. On the first day of class, one writing instructor tells her students that…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Imagination, Journal Writing, Self Expression
Ingham, Zita – 1993
Assumptions that writers of books about creative writing make about their audiences, as well as assumptions about the purposes, practice, and value of writing, differ noticeably from the assumptions made by people who teach and write about composition. In substance and form, the range of creative writing books includes autobiography, interviews,…
Descriptors: College Students, Creative Writing, Creativity, Higher Education
Crafton, Lisa Plummer – 1989
A process-oriented freshman composition instructor who stresses invention, drafting, and revision can simultaneously integrate a form of grammatical instruction. Various methods and strategies, both from experience and research on grammar from the classical to the contemporary era, suggest such a creative integration. First, the teaching of…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Freshman Composition, Grammar, Higher Education
Crafton, John Micheal – 1989
Based on his experience of being trained in a process-centered pedagogy and of working in a product-centered program, a writing instructor discovers that the in-class essay is not only a useful or workable part of a regressive curriculum, but that it is effective and necessary for any progressive process orientation as well. Pragmatic, ethical,…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Essays, Expository Writing, Higher Education
Nugent, Susan Monroe, Ed. – The Leaflet, 1987
Focusing on synthesis--the ability to recognize and create new ideas that subsume and relate to others--as one of the most sophisticated skills writers can attain, the articles in this journal present many ideas for teaching synthesis and a number of classroom approaches that combine the study of English with other fields. The following titles and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Interdisciplinary Approach, Secondary Education, Synthesis
Stein, Mark J. – 1987
A study analyzed how freshman composition students handled an assignment that forced them to perform an act of sophisticated literacy which was a variation between spontaneity (present) and repetition (past) with a focus on how novice writers borrow language, whether through quotation or misquotation. The assignment involved two masterpieces of…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Language Variation, Persuasive Discourse, Student Writing Models
Kiedaisch, Jean; Dinitz, Sue – 1989
The theories of cognitive development put forth by William Perry and by Jean Piaget are helpful in understanding the writing choices students made in responding to an assignment involving writing a persuasive essay. Some students were looking for the "Right Answer" and when they found it, they assumed that everyone would agree with them.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Style, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Hansen, Craig; Wilcox, Lance – 1984
Generally, there are three kinds of software that could be used in college writing courses: word processing programs, interactive questionnaires, and text parsers. Although the benefits of these programs are well known, they still pose some problems. Word processors, for example, have been designed to "process" existing text; few have…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Software, Higher Education, Microcomputers
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Hudson, Sally A. – Research in the Teaching of English, 1986
Describes children's views of the contexts surrounding their writing and examines five contextual factors: ownership, setting, audience, purpose, and genre.
Descriptors: Age Differences, Audiences, Context Effect, Elementary Secondary Education
Gilbertsen, Michael; Killingsworth, M. Jimmie – Iowa State Journal of Business and Technical Communication, 1987
Presents a process-oriented method for teachers of stylistic editing workshops that allows them to (1) focus on individual students, (2) start with students basic repertory of responses and build from there, (3) work with freely emitted behavior, (4) ensure frequent and brief responses, and (5) achieve desired behavior through sequential steps.…
Descriptors: Editing, Editors, Higher Education, Process Education
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