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Chengchen Li – Studies in Second Language Learning and Teaching, 2025
This study investigates task-specific emotions, examining how they arise and impact performance in a second language writing task through the lens of control-value theory and a positive psychology (PP) perspective. Participants were 206 secondary English-as-a-foreign-language learners from rural China. They completed an English argumentative…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
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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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Martorana, Christine – Composition Forum, 2016
The Real/Ideal Research Project is comprised of three components, ordered in purposeful succession, designed to emphasize the interconnectedness of emotion, reason, and action. In the first component, students compose a personal narrative focused on a specific inequity they (have) experience(d) or witnessed. Here, students are encouraged to…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Personal Narratives, Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response
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Batzer, Benjamin – Composition Forum, 2016
This article asks us to consider what the process of healing and composition pedagogy have to learn from each other. More specifically, it identifies how the therapeutic potential of writing, which has been largely neglected in the academy in recent years, can influence the ways we teach transferable writing skills. The article considers how…
Descriptors: Therapy, Academic Discourse, Writing Instruction, Writing Skills
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Carlo, Rosanne – Composition Forum, 2016
In the field of rhetoric and composition, literacy narratives are sometimes framed through the idea of "inventing the university"; this, unfortunately, creates a trope of literacy as success. I argue that the success trope limits student expression of "outlaw" emotions in literacy narratives--like loss, pain, and anxiety--and…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response
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Driscoll, Dana Lynn; Powell, Roger – Composition Forum, 2016
Drawing from a five-year longitudinal data set following thirteen college writers through undergraduate writing and beyond, we explore the impact of students' emotions and emotional dispositions on their ability to transfer writing knowledge and on their overall writing development. Participants experienced a range of emotions concerning their…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Longitudinal Studies, Mixed Methods Research, Writing Across the Curriculum
Cook, Royce – Online Submission, 2008
Purpose: The purpose of the report is to provide teachers with tried and proven methodology to improve student writing. Methodology: The practices described are based on enclosed research and first-hand experience garnered while working with inner-city students in both middle and high school in San Antonio, TX. Results: Students that are given the…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Teaching Methods, Urban Schools, Writing Instruction
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Baecker, Diann – Composition Forum, 2007
There are not many English words for "anger." There's "wrath" and "ire," although no one uses "ire" anymore and hardly anyone "wrath." There's "frustration," "resentment," and "indignation," but they don't have the emotional intensity of "anger," a word that…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Writing Processes, Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response