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Scott Wible – College Composition and Communication, 2020
Integrating design thinking methodology into writing courses can help students to develop creative approaches to problem definition and solution development. Tracing how students work with and through written genres common to design thinking reveals the possibilities and potential of learning new patterns of inquiry and argumentation. Developing…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Writing Instruction, Creative Thinking, Design
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Kathleen Blake Yancey; Matthew Davis; Liane Robertson; Kara Taczak; Erin Workman – College Composition and Communication, 2019
Drawing on the Teaching for Transfer (TFT) writing curriculum, this study documents how students in writing courses at four different institutions transferred writing knowledge and practice concurrently into other sites of writing, including other courses, co-curriculars, and workplaces. This research demonstrates that when students, supported by…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), College Students, Transfer of Training, Teaching Methods
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Jennifer Lin LeMesurier – College Composition and Communication, 2016
This article explores bodily movement practices as a foundational component of rhetorical awareness. Through ethnographic study of dance pedagogy, the author demonstrates how genre uptake is enabled by bodily experience; learned ways of moving produce inclinations toward certain rhetorical pathways over others. Enabling students to uptake new…
Descriptors: Movement Education, Dance Education, Human Body, Rhetoric
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Heather Bastian – College Composition and Communication, 2017
Writing educators have long sought to disrupt academic convention. However, we currently know little about students' affective experiences when they are asked to compose differently. This article explores the results of a research study to illuminate the feelings and attitudes students experience when convention is disrupted and offers pedagogical…
Descriptors: College Students, Freshman Composition, Writing Instruction, Public Colleges
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Gere, Anne Ruggles; Aull, Laura; Escudero, Moises Damian Perales; Lancaster, Zak; Lei, Elizabeth Vander – College Composition and Communication, 2013
Grounded in the principle that writing assessment should be locally developed and controlled, this article describes a study that contextualizes and validates the decisions that students make in the modified Directed Self-Placement (DSP) process used at the University of Michigan. The authors present results of a detailed text analysis of…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Student Placement, Self Evaluation (Individuals), Writing Evaluation
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Applegarth, Risa – College Composition and Communication, 2012
This study examines how changes in a key scientific genre supported anthropology's early twentieth-century bid for scientific status. Combining spatial theories of genre with inflections from the register of economics, I develop the concept of "rhetorical scarcity" to characterize this genre change not as evolution but as manipulation that…
Descriptors: Anthropology, Epistemology, Science Education, Figurative Language
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Sullivan, Patrick; Zhang, Yufeng; Zheng, Fenglan – College Composition and Communication, 2012
This article is a pragmatic, classroom-focused conversation about the teaching of writing among three teachers living in the United States and China, separated by many thousands of miles and many centuries of tradition and culture. Our focus here is on classroom concerns: actual student writing, assignment design, and assessment. We seek to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Writing Instruction, College Instruction, Writing Teachers
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Addison, Joanne; McGee, Sharon James – College Composition and Communication, 2010
This article synthesizes and extends data from some of the most prominent and promising large-scale research projects in writing studies while also presenting results from the authors' own research. By juxtaposing these studies, the authors offer a complex understanding of writing practices at the high school and college level. Future directions…
Descriptors: Writing Processes, High Schools, Trend Analysis, Research Projects
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Kill, Melanie – College Composition and Communication, 2006
In the interest of better understanding the challenges of enacting new pedagogies in the classroom, the following essay focuses on the role of genre and uptake in the relational negotiation of self-presentation. I argue that to bring our teaching practices in line with our best intentions and most progressive pedagogies we need to be aware not…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Writing Instruction, Literary Genres, Motivation Techniques
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Devitt, Amy J. – College Composition and Communication, 1993
Explains the new conception of literary genre as it is being devised in the fields of literary studies, linguistics, and rhetoric. Suggests how this new conception has affected the thinking of teachers on writing and writing instruction. (HB)
Descriptors: English Curriculum, English Instruction, Higher Education, Literary Genres
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Peterson, Linda H. – College Composition and Communication, 1991
Examines questions concerning the assignment of autobiographical essays. Discusses the links between gender and genre. Argues that writing teachers should reexamine their assumptions about "good" autobiographical writing and acknowledge the links between gender and genre. (MG)
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Essays, Higher Education, Literary Genres
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Newkirk, Thomas – College Composition and Communication, 2004
This essay examines the writing done at the University of New Hampshire in the period between 1928 and 1942. It argues that while there was extensive writing from personal experience, this writing did not perform the "turn" where the writer claims a new form of self-understanding. It goes on to suggest that work with this largely observational…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), College Students, Self Concept