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Thomas, P. L. – English Journal, 2011
In this high-accountability era--one in which there is an expanding movement to condemn teachers for the failures of their schools--teachers teach students who believe writing is primarily an act of complying to a prompt, likely for a state accountability assessment or the troubling 25-minute essay that constitutes less than half of the writing…
Descriptors: Accountability, Writing Instruction, Best Practices, Educational Practices
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Kirsch, Gesa E. – College English, 1997
Examines the effects of reading and writing multivocal texts and argues that writers need to assume interpretive responsibility for creating new forms of discourse. (TB)
Descriptors: Ethics, Higher Education, Text Structure, Values
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Bernhardt, Stephen A. – College Composition and Communication, 1993
Discusses how changes in the technology of text, specifically a shift in the medium of presentation from paper to screen, will invariably trigger changes in the shape of the text. Utilizes a text analytical approach to identify nine dimensions of the key differences between paper and on-screen text. (HB)
Descriptors: Computers, Educational Trends, English Instruction, Higher Education
Hassett, Michael; Lott, Rachel W. – Composition Studies, 2000
Argues for the teaching of "visible features of written texts," or document design, in composition classes. Concludes that educators must teach students how to see their own texts through the eyes of the readers they hope to attract, converse with, and persuade. (SC)
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Higher Education, Perspective Taking, Rhetoric
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Henry, Alex; Roseberry, Robert L. – Research in the Teaching of English, 1996
Reports on a study of genre and register that reaches the following conclusions concerning the teaching of language and literature: (1) teaching should concentrate on the move structure of genres and the concomitant move registers rather than the general register of a genre as a whole; and (2) the teaching of reading and writing should be…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Higher Education, Linguistics, Literary Genres
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Bolter, Jay David – Computers and Composition, 1993
Describes the emerging subject in computer technology known as hypertext by employing the metaphor of a bazaar. Claims that hypertext as a mode of communication has distinct features that will prove fruitful for future users. Discusses the importance of narrative chronology in relation to hypertext. (HB)
Descriptors: Collaborative Writing, Computer Assisted Instruction, Computers, Higher Education
Grumman, Bob – Teachers & Writers, 1994
Classifies the various forms that exist in a type of poetry dubbed "burstnorm" poetry, a form of lyrical poetry. Differentiates burstnorm from two other types, "plaintext" and "songmode poetry." Describes three types of burstnorm poetry: surrealistic, pluraesthetic, and language poetry. Discusses further subtypes of…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Literary Genres, Lyric Poetry, Secondary Education
Kaplan, Robert B. – Writing Instructor, 1990
Considers the rhetorical conventions that nonnative speakers of English often carry with them when they learn English. Stresses the need to respect students' diversity. (MG)
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Higher Education, Language Skills, Rhetoric
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Takayoshi, Pamela – Computers and Composition, 1996
Theorizes that three features of electronic texts have changed writing and writing instruction: the creation of a seamless flow of text, word publishing as a rhetorical act, and hypertextual writing and thinking. Discusses implications for how teachers read, respond to, and evaluate student writing. Stresses importance of linking writing…
Descriptors: Electronic Text, Higher Education, Portfolios (Background Materials), Student Evaluation
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LeTourneau, Mark S. – Composition Chronicle: Newsletter for Writing Teachers, 1996
This paper proposes that a metaphor of linguistic levels, similar to that used in general linguistic theory, be applied to the study of levels within an essay. The linguistic conception of levels in a piece of writing is not sentence-paragraph-essay (which might be characterized as a rhetorical division) but rather (or in addition to)…
Descriptors: Coherence, Connected Discourse, Definitions, Discourse Analysis
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Knutson, Debra S. – 1996
For much of this century, text linguists have recognized that various tokens called "metadiscourse" may help explain how texts function. In linguistics, metadiscourse has a more concrete meaning than it typically does in composition: it refers to specific words, phrases, and clauses which are primarily intended to help the reader…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Instructional Improvement, Linguistics, Readability
Clark, John M. – 1994
Despite accompanying drawbacks, the Internet information system known as Gopher presents a rich variety of potential benefits to writing pedagogies and to educational administrators. Writing teachers need to overcome tendencies to think of exploration of the Internet information resources as something to be uncritically adopted and as something to…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Higher Education, Information Retrieval, Information Systems
Johnson-Eilola, Johndan – 1991
Academic theory about hypertext indicates that hypertext use makes concrete postmodern and post-structuralist theories of text. When it is said that hypertext offers a new type of freedom and power for readers and writers, what are some of the things that are signaled implicitly? In conservative hypertexts, "choice" means being able to…
Descriptors: Activism, Communication (Thought Transfer), Computers, Higher Education
Tuman, Myron C. – 1992
Elaborating on Emile Durkheim's claim that major debates about pedagogy are always an indicator of underlying social change, this book charts the enormous impact computers are having on how people read and write, how reading and writing are taught, and how literacy is defined. The larger concern of the book is how technology generally affects not…
Descriptors: Computers, Critical Reading, Definitions, Hypermedia
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Lock, Graham; Lockhart, Charles – Hong Kong Journal of Applied Linguistics, 1998
Identifies and describes the genres that a group of tertiary level English-as-a-Second-Language students produced during a process writing class in which they were free to decide their own topics, purposes, and audiences. Characteristics of these genres, the relationships among them, and their schematic structures are described. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: College Students, English (Second Language), English for Academic Purposes, Foreign Countries