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Hurley, John – 1999
This paper discusses parody as an effective pedagogical device and as a way of teaching recognition of, and appreciation for, form. If the subject parodied is in poetic form, then rhyme and rhythm become factors for the parodist to consider. If the subject parodied is in prose, then the parodist must address the techniques of narrative,…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Elementary Secondary Education, Parody, Poetry
Greenleaf, Cynthia – 1992
A study examined the integration of computers into the writing practices of a ninth-grade remedial English class in an urban high school in the San Francisco area. Computers and word processors were introduced midway into the school year. The class was observed and recorded daily through the academic year, and all written work collected. Six…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Computer Assisted Instruction, English Instruction, High Schools
Smit, David W. – 1991
It is maintained in this paper that the "crisis" in writing is more a function of instructors' attitudes and expectations than a result of how students actually write. There are various reasons to question the crisis, for example: while the results of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)--the most careful test of writing ability…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Instructional Improvement, Learning Processes
Mitchell, Felicia – 1992
Evaluative criteria implicit in written comments on student writing can embody a definition of text which leads students to see text as superficial and formal instead of deep and meaningful. Students develop their perceptions of professors' values from the cues they receive via comments. A major problem, especially among faculty from different…
Descriptors: Grading, Higher Education, Process Approach (Writing), Student Evaluation
Souviney, Randall; Miller-Souviney, Barbara – 1986
This guide discusses how computers can be integrated into the writing process. The guide includes sections on stages of the writing process (pre-writing, writing, response, revision, and recognition); letters from children using computers for projects and communication with other children; and a review of some word processors and writing tools.…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Software Reviews, Elementary Education, Student Writing Models
Henning, Teresa – 1994
Peter Elbow's expressionist approach to rhetoric lacks the critical position that feminism requires. Expressionist rhetoric's focus on the personal does not make it a feminist rhetoric because its conception of the personal as well as its conception of itself as a rhetoric is uncritical and ignores the social context that subject positions,…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Cultural Influences, Discourse Modes, Females
Eklundh, Kerstin Severinson – 1992
Word processors have been shown to favor a local perspective over a global perspective on the text during writing. Recently, advanced outline processors or "idea processors" have appeared that allow the writer to represent and handle structural aspects of a text so that the writer may compose the text within an outline and experiment with…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cognitive Processes, Foreign Countries, Language Research
Strauss-Sotiropoulos, Carol – 1989
Through classroom observation and examination of literature on adult learning, second language teachers can learn to adapt teaching styles to adult needs. Research on maturation suggests that in course planning and teaching, adults should be included in formulating learning objectives and designing learning experiences, taught to exploit their own…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Students, Andragogy, Classroom Techniques
Jarausch, Hannelore; Tufts, Clare – 1988
The purposes of writing in the foreign language classroom are similar to those in other disciplines. The process approach to writing instruction is useful in any language. Selection of writing topics is based on vocabulary and available skills, and careful sequencing and control of range of topics helps develop proficiency. Writing assignments can…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Curriculum Development, Process Approach (Writing), Second Language Instruction
Brown, Julie; Brown, Robert – 1991
The "writing workshop" approach to teaching creative writing, virtually unchallenged throughout the United States, has recently come under fire. Two schools of thought, while agreeing that the traditional workshop needs a thorough overhaul, differ in approaches to that overhaul. One approach, using the theories of Harold Bloom, argues…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Higher Education, Instructional Improvement, Literature Appreciation
Havola, Liisa – 1987
Reading and writing have traditionally been treated as separate processes, but some research on the relationship suggests that the two processes should be taught together. It is also proposed that skill in recognizing a text's main idea is a summarizing skill, demanding the cognitive and linguistic prerequisites appropriate to the text type. Good…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Discourse Analysis, Educational Strategies, Reading Comprehension
Keller, Maria A.; Mitrano-Neto, Nelson – 1987
A study investigated whether a change in focus, viewing student writing as a process rather than a product, would have a significant positive effect on writing skill development. Secondarily, the study examined the effectiveness of actual teaching techniques, including a series of writing tasks interspersed with student-teacher interaction and the…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Comparative Analysis, Educational Strategies, English (Second Language)
Adams, Dennis M. – 1983
The need for the liberal arts curriculum to incorporate new technology in order for education to reach its potential is examined in this paper, which also looks at the potential for computer-based telecommunications to extend continued education for professionals. A survey of applications of computer-based telecommunications in reading and writing…
Descriptors: Computer Oriented Programs, Computer Software, Liberal Arts, Programing
Carter, Ronnie D. – 1983
Almost 600 questionnaires were sent to private and public colleges and universities in a nationwide survey of their revision practices in advanced composition courses. Among the results were the following: (1) the teacher figured most powerfully in any revision activity; (2) a single mode of revision was the prevailing practice; (3) private…
Descriptors: Editing, Higher Education, Revision (Written Composition), Surveys
Boloz, Sigmund A.; Loughrin, Patricia L. – 1983
One proposed model of the writing process describes writing as a dynamic, three dimensional, interactive process. It is dynamic in that it changes in intensity proportionate to the sophistication of the student and the teacher. It is three dimensional and interactive because, similar to the gears within a clock, it is composed of a number of…
Descriptors: Assignments, Elementary Secondary Education, Interaction, Models
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