Publication Date
| In 2026 | 0 |
| Since 2025 | 3 |
| Since 2022 (last 5 years) | 26 |
| Since 2017 (last 10 years) | 70 |
| Since 2007 (last 20 years) | 206 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Publication Type
Education Level
Location
| California | 12 |
| New York | 10 |
| Ohio | 8 |
| Florida | 7 |
| New York (New York) | 7 |
| Illinois | 6 |
| Maryland | 5 |
| Texas | 5 |
| Indiana | 4 |
| Arizona | 3 |
| Georgia | 3 |
| More ▼ | |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
| Brown v Board of Education | 1 |
| Civil Rights Act 1964 | 1 |
| Elementary and Secondary… | 1 |
| No Child Left Behind Act 2001 | 1 |
| United States v Fordice | 1 |
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
| Does not meet standards | 3 |
Peer reviewedOdell, Lee – Journal of Basic Writing, 1995
Claims that there is general agreement of a need to rethink the basic writing course. Posits that there is also a need to rethink the view of literacy on which the course is often based. Questions aspects of academic literacy and suggests ways to reform writing instruction at all levels by looking at literate practices outside the academy. (PA)
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Basic Writing, Curriculum Development, Higher Education
Peer reviewedBartholomae, David – Journal of Basic Writing, 1993
Considers basic writing as a way of naming (and producing) a curriculum, an area of study, a type of writing, and writing practice. Discusses the history of the term "basic writing" and the role of the intellectual, the culture, and its institutions in its production. (SR)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Educational History, Higher Education, Politics of Education
Peer reviewedStrickland, Donna – Composition Studies/Freshman English News, 1998
Considers the circumstances under which "basic writing" emerged both as a college course and as a field of study. Aims to map the "strange context" of discourses that have composed basic writing and to determine the strategic function of each of these discourses, including David Bartholomae's recent call for undoing basic…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, College English, Higher Education, Teacher Student Relationship
Shor, Ira – Journal of Basic Writing (CUNY), 2009
This essay responds to Jane Danielewicz's and Peter Elbow's recent piece on contract grading in "College Composition and Communication" (December 2009). I discuss the similarities of their approach to my own contract process, finding that we share a quantitative/performative method for grading. I also explore our differences. While they guarantee…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Writing (Composition), Grading, Stakeholders
Jones, Ed – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 2008
This study of 118 students who placed into basic skills sections of College English suggests that students' self-beliefs may be a particularly important predictor of success in weak writers in first-semester courses. Two types of writing self-efficacy scales--a writing tasks/skills scale and an approach-to-writing scale--were developed to follow…
Descriptors: Locus of Control, College English, Writing Skills, Self Efficacy
Crews, Denise M.; Aragon, Steven R. – Community College Journal of Research and Practice, 2007
This study examined the relationships between first semester participation in a community college developmental writing course and persistence and goal attainment. The study examined whether developmental writing course participants completed more of their credits, enrolled for more semesters, and completed degree/certificates and/or transferred…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Credits, Basic Writing, Community Colleges
Peer reviewedHouston, Linda – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1997
Contends that developmental writing students' self confidence improves when they understand their learning styles. Outlines how the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator is used to pinpoint students' learning styles and how to help students work "their way." (PA)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Cognitive Style, Higher Education, Self Esteem
Peer reviewedAllen, Diane – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1997
Offers a method to help writing students generate ideas and collect their thoughts: (1) giving students 10 minutes to freewrite about being stranded on a desert island; (2) writing one page on a thesis statement; and (3) having students "talk through" their papers in small groups. (PA)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Higher Education, Instructional Innovation, Student Needs
Peer reviewedLu, Min-Zhan – College English, 1992
Describes how struggle and conflict are constructive for writers. Examines why this view of conflict had rhetorical power historically for theorists. Explores how and why this view persists among basic writing teachers in the 1990s. (HB)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Educational History, Educational Trends, Higher Education
Peer reviewedRubin, Lois – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1992
Describes two writing assignments for basic writers (synthesizing influences from Mike Rose and David Bartholomae) in which students perform complex thinking and writing tasks while writing about their own experiences and those of fictional characters similar to themselves. (SR)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, College English, English Instruction, Higher Education
Wershoven, Carol – Writing Instructor, 1991
Notes that personal writing continues to proliferate, especially in freshman composition and basic writing courses. Argues that overemphasis on personal writing, on finding a "voice," may become exclusionary rather than liberating. Argues that it is crucial to teach students how to read, react to, and write about anything beyond the…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Journal Writing
Peer reviewedGray-Rosendale, Laura – Journal of Basic Writing, 1998
Investigates the contradictory terminological investments within the charges against Mina Shaughnessy's scholarship (i.e., "essentialism,""accommodationism," and lack of "materialist praxis") from poststructuralist, feminist, and Marxist quarters. Maintains, through close readings of Shaughnessy's texts, that the…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Higher Education, Marxism, Rhetorical Criticism
Peer reviewedHorner, Bruce – College Composition and Communication, 1996
Explores how insights of the 1970s are being lost, namely, those about why and how the academy thinks about basic writing and students deemed "illiterate" or "remedial." Examines a discourse that the author calls Basic Writing and how it has marginalized basic writing courses, teachers, and students. (TB)
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Basic Writing, Educational History, Higher Education
Pine, Nancy – Journal of Basic Writing (CUNY), 2008
This article explores the particular challenges and possibilities of service learning pedagogy for basic writers. Because a number of scholars of service learning and basic writing (Adler-Kassner, Arca, and Kraemer) are concerned primarily with developing underprepared students' academic literacies, I investigated how the students in a service…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Service Learning, Writing Instruction, College Science
Vande Kopple, William J. – 1999
This paper describes some aspects of essays produced by students who as writers in the United States would commonly be called "basic writers." The paper focuses primarily on the grammatical subjects in these essays and offers a view of how closely grammatical structure typical in speech correspond to those typical in writing. It reports…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Basic Writing, Discourse Analysis, Discourse Modes

Direct link
