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Brice, Roanne G. – Intervention in School and Clinic, 2004
Written language requires prior knowledge of many foundation language skills. Students with language learning disabilities find it difficult to integrate language skills into academic writing assignments. Exceptional educators can teach foundation writing skills through certain underlying components of language, that is, phonology, morphology,…
Descriptors: Prior Learning, Written Language, Writing Skills, Syntax
Peer reviewedRussell, Alison – Academic Exchange Quarterly, 2003
Describes an instructor's analysis of students' responses to an assignment to describe the events of September 11, 2001 for a visual and media literacy course. Discusses the impact of media reports on students' perceptions of those events, and the inability of most students to critically analyze the situation because of the absence of personal…
Descriptors: Colleges, Higher Education, Instruction, Journalism
Bangert-Drowns, Robert L.; Hurley, Marlene M.; Wilkinson, Barbara – Review of Educational Research, 2004
Since the early 1970s, many educators have touted writing as a means of enhancing learning. Several reasons have been suggested for this purported enhancement: that writing is a form of learning, that writing approximates human speech, that writing supports learning strategies. Alternatively, some researchers have cautioned that the educative…
Descriptors: Writing Strategies, Academic Achievement, Meta Analysis, Metacognition
Young, Sandra – Composition Studies, 2005
This essay describes a special topics creative writing course designed for nursing students, and argues that creative writing strategies work to improve nurses' compositional skills. Also discussed are other potential benefits from creatively writing patients' lives, notably, the blending of arts and sciences, and the ways in which medical schools…
Descriptors: Nursing Students, Writing Strategies, Creative Writing, Patients
Toglia, Thomas V. – Tech Directions, 2004
Sooner or later, every educator hears the following plea from a current or former student: "Will you write a letter of recommendation for me?" Usually, the student is seeking employment or applying to a college or university for additional education. Many times instructors--taken off guard and unprepared for these requests--find themselves staring…
Descriptors: Technical Writing, Teacher Student Relationship, Letters (Correspondence), Writing (Composition)
Quible, Zane K. – Business Communication Quarterly, 2006
Two types of sentence-level writing problems are often observed in student writing: (1) those that violate conventions of standard written English, such as subject-verb agreement errors and comma splices; and (2) those that involve a stylistic choice, such as beginning a sentence with an expletive structure like "There are" or using "if" rather…
Descriptors: Writing Strategies, Writing Improvement, Writing Instruction, Writing Skills
Levin, Tamar; Wagner, Tili – Instructional Science: An International Journal of Learning and Cognition, 2006
This article explores student views on writing as shown by the metaphors they use when asked to reflect on their own writing-to-learn tasks in the science classroom. The study examines the metaphors and metaphoric themes of 97 eighth grade students, discusses how they compare to important theories on writing to learn, and explores how student…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Writing (Composition), Science Education, Figurative Language
Kieft, Marleen; Rijlaarsdam, Gert; van den Bergh, Huub – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2006
The claim that writing facilitates students' learning, although widely accepted, has little support from empirical research. A possible explanation for the lack of empirical evidence is that writing-to-learn research has disregarded that students use different writing strategies. The purpose of the present experimental study is to test whether it…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Writing Strategies, Secondary Education, Grade 10
In, Fan-yu; Liao, Hui-Chuan – College Teaching Methods & Styles Journal, 2008
Course designs for Basic English Writing classes vary from one course to another. The objective of this study was to investigate the semantic misinterpretation of English words found in the English compositions written by native-Chinese-speaking undergraduate students and to overcome if such a barrier occurred in the process of writing. First,…
Descriptors: College Seniors, Native Language, Chinese, Basic Writing
Sheryl Lain – Voices from the Middle, 2007
Students who engage in the writing process learn to write. Period. And yet many teachers, including Lain when she was a beginning teacher, don't know how to make the time for it, how to structure it, and how to evaluate it. Here, Lain offers us the help we need by focusing on the teaching tools for introducing students to this format, the…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Poetry, Writing Workshops, Writing Processes
Van Woerkum, C. M. J. – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 2007
The aim of this article is to show that a better awareness of the relationship between written and spoken communication can help the writer to improve his/her effectiveness. The focus will be on written texts that precede (formal and informal) discussions. The analysis will start with a description of the differences between orality and literacy.…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Literacy, Creativity, Writing Instruction
Blau, Susan R. – 1995
Classrooms are filled with students with confident and vibrant voices, and most educators encourage them to use these voices in their writing. Many of the strategies of the process-centered classroom (peer editing, conferences, workshops, in-house publishing) also encourage students to write in real voices to real readers; however, there is still…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Advertising, Audience Awareness, Higher Education
LaMascus, R. Scott – 1995
Television commercials and print ads have proven to be an effective means of introducing composition students to strategies for analysis and writing. They rely heavily on the eye to interpret images quickly according to fairly reliable habits. They are naturally occurring forms of argument and students have substantial intuitive competence with…
Descriptors: Advertising, Higher Education, Mass Media, Persuasive Discourse
Fredericksen, Elaine – 1996
Composition teachers and researchers recognize the difficulty young writers, especially females, face as they enter postsecondary education and attempt to learn the language of the academy. Addressing academic audiences "takes confidence and authority, qualities that are often challenged in women because of their historical exclusion from and…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Females, Feminism, Freshman Composition
Ostrom, Hans – 1996
This paper asks what role "play" plays in writing and how it can help a writer, whatever dread, boredom, skill, or ethnicity he/she brings to writing. Some of the ideas in the paper come from Africa, courtesy of Robert Farris Thompson. In his "philosophy of discourse" discussed in the paper, Thompson speaks of the "big…
Descriptors: African Culture, Higher Education, Self Expression, Student Attitudes

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