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Fosen, Chris – 2000
All styles of genre research share an attention to particular features of texts in use. The question is, however, how to teach genre. This paper first reviews what seem to be two opposed theories of teaching genre. After arguing that to differing extents both theories rely upon a transmission model of teaching, the paper then discusses attempts to…
Descriptors: Discourse Communities, Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Internship Programs
Peer reviewedPetronio, Sandra; Flores, Lisa A.; Hecht, Michael L. – Western Journal of Communication, 1997
Explores the concept of voice by turning to disclosure discourse about sexual abuse. Argues that sexually abused children are strategic and logical in the way they regulate access to this private information. Notes that the children locate their voice of logic in their selection of confidants. States that researchers can position themselves as…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Communication Research, Discourse Communities, Privacy
Peer reviewedWilson, Michael – Children's Literature in Education, 1997
Discusses the unexplored territory of the stories teenagers have to tell. Contends that teenagers tell personal experience narratives as much as anybody else, using a repertoire of tales at a high level of competence as a means of social currency within their everyday conversational exchanges. Illustrates with quotes from fieldwork in secondary…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Discourse Analysis, Discourse Communities, Educational Research
Peer reviewedBattalio, John T. – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 1996
Shows the path to professionalization through four phases of ornithological discourse history, drawing upon articles in "The Auk," published from 1890-90. States that, originally a single discourse form, the personal narrative of natural history served ornithological science. Finds that a gap between science and public understanding was…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Discourse Analysis, Discourse Communities, Ornithology
Peer reviewedHasian, Marouf, Jr.; And Others – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1996
Argues that the phrase "think like a lawyer" confers a technical understanding of legal practices unavailable to ordinary people. Invites critics, in another approach, to examine ways laws are negotiated within rhetorical culture, then transformed into legal edicts. Studies the case of "Separate but Equal" doctrine to offer a…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Court Litigation, Cultural Context, Discourse Analysis
Peer reviewedHarris, Carol – Journal of Educational Administration and Foundations, 2002
Traces philosophical appraisals of technology, both as devices for human purposes and, as technological rationality, as ways of thinking and acting. Two applications of communication technology in the context of Canadian coastal communities illustrate the distinction between training and education, and the importance of public space in which to…
Descriptors: Agencies, Communications, Community Needs, Discourse Communities
Peer reviewedHarper, Helen – English Quarterly, 1990
Compares the work of three educational theorists from across the political spectrum. Places E. D. Hirsch's concept of cultural literacy against the liberal ideas posited by Louise Rosenblatt and the more radical ideas of Henry Giroux. Finds crucial differences among the three regarding whose knowledge and discourse is validated in the classroom.…
Descriptors: Discourse Communities, Educational Philosophy, Educational Practices, Educational Theories
Peer reviewedBlair, Kristine L. – Computers and Composition, 1996
Shows how microethnography can be an effective tool for analyzing the possibilities and constraints of electronic discourse by overviewing two electronic mail ethnography projects. Suggests that such approaches can help students better understand electronic rhetoric as well as electronic ideology (the power relationships and cultural values that…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Discourse Communities, Electronic Mail, Ethnography
Peer reviewedGalegher, Jolene; Sproull, Lee; Kiesler, Sara – Written Communication, 1998
Compares electronic support groups to electronic hobby groups to demonstrate the difference in terms of the rhetorical behavior of participants. Finds that some discourse characteristics and rhetorical features are common to all groups, others are unique to the special requirements of electronic support groups. (PA)
Descriptors: Communication Research, Computer Mediated Communication, Discourse Analysis, Discourse Communities
Peer reviewedButler, John – Argumentation and Advocacy, 1995
Analyzes the events of July 23, 1993, when Carol Moseley-Braun was involved in two rhetorical events in the United States Senate dealing with racial issues and the rhetorical culture of the Senate. Concludes that the reactions are as telling as the actions, revealing a United States Senate fundamentally unprepared for such a subject and such a…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Discourse Analysis, Discourse Communities, Hearings
Peer reviewedMetz, J. Michel – New Jersey Journal of Communication, 1995
Discusses the controversy surrounding the existence of a culture created by those who use computers; some argue that computers lack emotional contact and that computer-mediated communication does not have the commonality to form a culture. Analyzes transcripts collected through a synchronous computer system, and argues that cultures are both…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Computer Mediated Communication, Computer Networks, Cultural Context
Stevenson, Heidi J. – Journal of Research on Technology in Education, 2005
Elementary school teachers in the present study reported informal collaboration regarding technology use as a more effective method of professional development than organizationally planned or sponsored activities. Despite the fact that teachers see their colleagues as valuable resources for learning how to utilize technology, the disciplined…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Cooperation, Professional Development, Technology Uses in Education
Flowerdew, John; Wan, Alina – English for Specific Purposes, 2006
This study is a genre analysis which explores the specific discourse community of tax accountants. Tax computation letters from one international accounting firm in Hong Kong were analyzed and compared. To probe deeper into the tax accounting discourse community, a group of tax accountants from the same firm was observed and questioned. The texts…
Descriptors: Taxes, Business Communication, Accounting, Discourse Communities
Holmes, Darren – Improving Schools, 2004
The Hartlepool Networked Learning Community has focused on promoting teacher enquiry as a vehicle for professional learning and raising standards of achievement in schools. This article highlights how the enquiry programme was designed and managed. It describes the ways that teachers have approached their enquiry work, including how some of the…
Descriptors: Learning Activities, Discourse Communities, Professional Development, Foreign Countries
Tai, Emily; Rochford, Regina A. – Community College Journal of Research and Practice, 2007
According to Tinto (1993), more students leave college than graduate, especially at the community college level. Much of the blame for this attrition has been attributed to a lack of adequate preparation for college-level courses. Consequently, many colleges must provide remedial programs despite the objections of opponents of remediation who…
Descriptors: Remedial Programs, Educational Change, Western Civilization, Community Colleges

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