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Rosenberg, Heidi D. – 2002
The issue of personal writing is hotly contested in composition studies. Some believe that personal writing has no place in academic writing. In a discussion with Peter Elbow regarding personal versus academic writing, David Bartholomae argues that "academic writing is the real work of the academy." Elbow, on the other hand, argues that…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Higher Education, Personal Writing, Writing Assignments
Lindemann, Erika – 2000
Archival research gives students opportunities to appreciate original documents and artifacts, teaching them how to access materials, to treat them with care, and to invest them with meaning, and demonstrating the partnership researchers develop with librarians. Three suggested writing assignments introduce students to special collections,…
Descriptors: Archives, Higher Education, Library Collections, Library Skills
Rose, Shirley K., Ed.; Weiser, Irwin, Ed. – 1999
This collection of essays discusses writing program administrators' (WPAs') research. The essays pose several questions to characterize WPAs' research practices: "What is WPA research? What characterizes WPA research and the sites of WPA inquiry?"; and "What values guide WPA research?" The 14 chapters are divided into 2 parts, "Writing Program…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Educational Administration, Higher Education, Writing Assignments
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Clifford, John; Ellerby, Janet – Composition Studies/Freshman English News, 1997
Describes writing assignments based on several readings on the ethical quagmire of pornography. Suggests that exploratory writing grounded in the texture of students' lives is an antidote to abstract, theoretical pronouncements. Urges returning to an ethics developed in a community of writers who begin with values already given but who form an…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Ethics, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
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Leonard, Elisabeth Anne – College Composition and Communication, 1997
Wrestles with the question of what kind of assignment to give to composition students at the University of Pittsburgh. Tries to strike a balance between critical reading and creativity, between work and play. Finds that "experimental writing" helps resolve the conflicts. Works to bring such writing into the classroom. (PA)
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Experimental Teaching, Higher Education, Instructional Innovation
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Malouff, John M.; Sims, Randi L. – Journal of Education for Business, 1996
A model based on Vroom's expectancy theory of employee motivation posits that instructors can prevent plagiarism by ensuring that students understand the rules of ethical writing, expect assignments to be manageable and have personal benefits, and expect plagiarism to be difficult and have important personal costs. (SK)
Descriptors: Ethics, Expectation, Higher Education, Motivation
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Aspy, David N.; Aspy, Cheryl B. – Educational Leadership, 1996
Following the Oklahoma City bombing, fifth graders at a nearby elementary school coped with ensuing uncertainty, pain, and loss. They wrote appreciative letters to fire and rescue workers; shared personal stories with classmates; compiled an anthology of poems, prayers, and stories; attended an assembly to honor parents participating in rescue…
Descriptors: Crisis Management, Elementary Education, Emergency Programs, Empathy
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Tensen, Tracy Anderson – Exercise Exchange, 1997
Encourages students to attempt to capture the voice of established poets in parodies. Notes that this close interaction with literature allows the students to gain a deeper appreciation and understanding of literary styles. Presents two student parodies of William Wordsworth's "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud." (RS)
Descriptors: High Schools, Literary Genres, Poetry, Student Writing Models
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Mayer, Charles W. – Eureka Studies in Teaching Short Fiction, 2003
Describes how the author addresses his independent study students. Suggests that teachers who write study guides and "teach" independent-study courses in literature should try to invent effective instructional aids that will mitigate the disadvantages of not having the everyday-classroom experience and provide maximum opportunity for freedom of…
Descriptors: Distance Education, Higher Education, Independent Study, Instructional Improvement
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Ussach, H. B.; Elder, Dana C. – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2003
Describes an eight-step writing assignment that is a novel way to test students' writing skills in a way that is intriguing, interactive, and team-oriented, with built-in multiple deadlines requiring quick creativity and cognitive knowledge. Presents a poetry writing exercise in which the student is asked to write a short poem in the voice of…
Descriptors: Instructional Innovation, Poetry, Student Attitudes, Two Year Colleges
Hurlbert, Claude Mark; Blitz, Michael – Composition Studies, 2003
Considers how over 10 years of teaching first-year composition, more than two-thirds of the authors' students have elected to write about things that have caused them sorrow, about the deaths of loved ones, about the deaths of neighbors, even of hope itself. Composes a set of "meditations" - brief essays in which the authors try to understand…
Descriptors: Death, Higher Education, Student Attitudes, Student Writing Models
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Gitelman, Honre Frank – Reading Horizons, 1990
Describes several writing activities in a writing program for fourth and fifth grade students using stimuli from the media. Notes that each theme was designed to increase students' ability to create original compositions from familiar material (such as advertisements and magazine photographs) using persuasive, narrative, or descriptive techniques.…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Elementary Education, Mass Media, Teaching Methods
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Herter, Roberta J. – English Journal, 1991
Describes a successful use of portfolios to assess the development of eleventh grade students' writing skills by inviting self-reflection and encouraging students to assume control over their writing. (KEH)
Descriptors: Grade 11, Secondary Education, Student Evaluation, Writing Assignments
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Rankin, Elizabeth – Journal of Advanced Composition, 1990
Outlines a set of terms which can be used (in sequencing writing assignments from simple to complex) to make distinctions between kinds of sequences and notions of complexity. Shows how these terms allow teachers to understand the logic of various sequences, compare and contrast related sequences, and evaluate the concept of assignment sequence.…
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, Higher Education, Sequential Approach, Writing Assignments
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Medway, Peter – English Education, 1990
Argues the need for additional experience in language for social action in contexts where English teachers can provide scaffolding, monitoring and intervention. Concludes that students must have experiences in real writing contexts that lead them to face the linguistic and other demands which will enable them to develop the competencies they need.…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Foreign Countries, Secondary Education, Technical Writing
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