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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
Skerrett, Allison – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2010
This article derives from an Adolescent Literacy course that had been designed to foster preservice teachers' knowledge, skills, and dispositions to teach from a multiliteracies perspective. At the course's conclusion, the author designed, and secured institutional IRB approval to conduct, a self-study of curriculum, teaching, and learning…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Preservice Teachers, Clubs, Sexuality
Connelly, John; Connelly, Marilyn – TechTrends: Linking Research and Practice to Improve Learning, 2009
A fun part of the curriculum that the authors used in their Media Literacy instruction was comparing written creations to the mediation of the same content. The material they used included poetry, such as Robert Frost poems, and short stories, including the work of O. Henry and Arthur Conan Doyle. Many media works are available where the producers…
Descriptors: Literary Genres, Media Literacy, Novels, Poetry
Breslow, Leonard A.; Trafton, J. Gregory; Ratwani, Raj M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2009
Previous research has shown that multicolored scales are superior to ordered brightness scales for supporting identification tasks on complex visualizations (categorization, absolute numeric value judgments, etc.), whereas ordered brightness scales are superior for relative comparison tasks (greater/less). We examined the processes by which such…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Identification, Measures (Individuals), Literary Genres
Hamilton, David; Weiner, Gaby – Education Inquiry, 2011
Drawing on our experience of working in Sweden and seeking to help colleagues enter the prestigious culture of Anglophone academic text production, this article explores the landscape of academic writing and publishing. We first provide an account of the birth of academic writing and the gradual emergence of its present forms. We then explore…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English, Faculty Publishing, Writing for Publication
Bauerlein, Mark – Center for College Affordability and Productivity (NJ1), 2011
One of the standard labor practices of research universities is to hire, pay, and promote faculty members on the basis of the research they produce. In the humanities, professors write books and articles and universities reward them accordingly. The system amounts to a considerable expenditure for the institution and a significant portion of…
Descriptors: Productivity, College Faculty, Essays, Humanities
Chen, Hong-qin – Online Submission, 2008
According to the theory of Systemic-Functional Linguistics (SFL), language cannot be disassociated from meaning. Function and semantics, as SFL suggests, are considered as the basis of human language and communicative activity. In order to reveal the inseparability of language and semantic, this paper aims to analyze and appreciate Hardy's poem…
Descriptors: Semantics, Literature Appreciation, Literary Criticism, Literary Genres
Spring, Suzanne B. – College Composition and Communication, 2008
Dispelling historical narratives in composition and rhetoric that largely depict nineteenth-century student compositions as "vacuous" themes, this archival study examines women's compositions at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary as complex generic hybrids, in which the composition is fused with common social and dialogic forms. By focusing…
Descriptors: Single Sex Colleges, Females, Writing (Composition), Literary Genres
Beard, Roger; Burrell, Andrew – Language and Education, 2010
Gender differences in the imaginative narrative and persuasive description writing of a sample of Year 5 (9- to 10-year-old) children were investigated using a standardised test and a repeat design, with the same tasks being undertaken a year later. The texts were analysed using test guidelines and genre-specific rating scales derived from the…
Descriptors: Writing Skills, Rating Scales, Gender Differences, Imagination
Smyth, Theoni Soublis; Hansen, Angela – English Journal, 2010
Collaboration and the appreciation for multiple perspectives have become increasingly important. The current political and economic condition in the United States and globally has exemplified the urgency for people of many different backgrounds and ideologies to work together to find solutions to world problems such as climate change and economic…
Descriptors: Group Activities, Language Arts, Literary Genres, Interpretive Skills
Vetter, Amy – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2011
Becoming a successful writer is an important skill for the young because it predicts academic success, supports and extends learning, provides opportunities to participate in civic and community life and fulfils expectations of the workforce to create clear and concise documents. Many secondary students in the US, however, struggle to gain basic…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Writing Instruction, High School Students, Grade 11
McNamara, Danielle S.; Ozuru, Yasuhiro; Floyd, Randy G. – International Electronic Journal of Elementary Education, 2011
We examined young readers' comprehension as a function of text genre (narrative, science), text cohesion (high, low), and readers' abilities (reading decoding skills and world knowledge). The overarching purpose of this study was to contribute to our understanding of the "fourth grade slump". Children in grade 4 read four texts,…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Reading Skills, Decoding (Reading), Word Recognition
Anderton, Gretchen E. – ProQuest LLC, 2009
This mixed-methods study examined romance readers' perceptions of how reading romance novels has impacted their sex lives, feelings about their sex partners, knowledge of sexuality and their sexual behavior. Fifty-three women romance readers over the age of 18 completed an online survey composed of multiple choice and open-ended essay questions. …
Descriptors: Novels, Literary Genres, Reading, Reader Text Relationship
Beck, Scott A.; Rangel, Dolores E. – Bilingual Review, 2009
This article gives an analysis of two books: Thomas Rivera's "...y no se lo trago la tierra" and Helena Maria Viramontes's "Under the Feet of Jesus". The two books are strong and important literary texts that stand in close relation to each other. Both texts treat the subject of migrant childhood by affirming central themes of Chicano literature.…
Descriptors: History, Mexican Americans, Children, Hispanic Americans
Davis, Kenneth W.; Weeden, Scott R. – Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2009
For tens of thousands of years, teachers have used stories to promote learning. Today's teachers can do the same. In particular, we can employ Joseph Campbell's "monomyth"--with its stages of separation, initiation, and return--as a model for structuring learning experiences. Within the monomyth, one tempting role for teachers is the sage, but we…
Descriptors: Teacher Role, Curriculum Design, Figurative Language, Story Telling

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