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Peer reviewedShafer, Gregory – English Journal, 2001
Describes how the author, teaching at a South Florida high school with many children of Mexican-American migrant workers, shaped his English instruction in scenarios that reflected students' lives and cultures. Shows how class discussions and assignments probed the worthiness of the language used and the reason why it was successful. Argues that…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Class Activities, English Instruction, High Schools
Peer reviewedHoonan, Kevin – Emergency Librarian, 1996
Presents an eighth-grade classroom where students collaborated with the teacher to decide how to designate time spent on reading, creative writing, and journal writing. Discusses needs assessment, student suggestions, choosing the solution, and implementation. A sidebar outlines student-determined writers' workshop, readers' workshop, and…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Cooperation, Creative Writing, Grade 8
Peer reviewedMatthews, Michael – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2001
Offers an interview with Robert Wylie, a distinguished two-year college English teacher for almost 50 years. Discusses how important it is for an English teacher to write, important issues in the profession, his views on the best ways to help students improve as writers, his observations about writing assignments, liking students, teaching…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Educational History, Educational Principles, English Instruction
Perkins, Matthew; Pfaffman, Jay – Science Teacher, 2006
Course management systems (CMSs) enable teachers to easily post assignments, lesson plans, announcements, and course documents. They also allow students to participate in online discussions and chats and turn in assignments online. Unfortunately, commercial systems are often expensive to purchase and maintain, removing them from the reach of many…
Descriptors: Management Systems, Elementary Secondary Education, Classroom Communication, Assignments
Meltzer, Julie; Hamann, Edmund T. – Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 2006
In this article, the authors discuss the plight of three very bright students, who have poor or limited English. The authors discuss how promising practices used to develop content-area reading, writing, and thinking can go a long way toward helping English language learners (ELLs) improve their literacy and learning. They discuss five sets of…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, English (Second Language), High School Students, Foreign Countries
Ponte, Lucille M. – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2006
Pedagogical experts contend that students learn best when they are actively involved in and responsible for their own learning. In a student-centered learning environment, the instructor ideally serves primarily as a learning resource or facilitator. With the guidance of the instructor, students in active learning environments strive for…
Descriptors: Legal Education (Professions), Active Learning, Teaching Methods, Thinking Skills
Kaufman, James C.; Baer, John; Gentile, Claudia A. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2004
The issue of racial/ethnic and gender differences in intelligence and academic abilities is fiercely and frequently debated, yet the examination of these differences in creativity is less studied. Our goal in this study was to use the Consensual Assessment Technique, in which experts judge a product's creativity, to examine differences in…
Descriptors: Creativity, Ethnic Groups, Personal Narratives, Gender Differences
Garcia, Paula – Assessment Update, 2006
Involving graduate teaching assistants (GAs) in the development and implementation of rubrics has many benefits. GA involvement increases their sense of ownership of the rubrics and makes it more likely that they will regard the rubrics in a positive light. GAs have insights about the students whose work will be evaluated by the rubrics; and, as…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Writing (Composition), Beginning Teachers, Teaching Assistants
Beck, Natalie; Fetherston, Tony – Information Technology in Childhood Education Annual, 2003
Writing, an essential part of every young child's school life, is a complex affair involving cognitive, affective, and psychomotor elements. Most children learn to write, with varying degrees of success, and every school has children who can be classified as nonwriters. Some children are inhibited and frustrated by writing and are put off by the…
Descriptors: Investigations, Writing Improvement, Writing Processes, Word Processing
Self-Assessment of Writing in Independent Language Learning Programs: The Value of Annotated Samples
Brown, Annie – Assessing Writing, 2005
The availability of multi-media technologies in education has made the option of independent learning increasingly attractive. Whilst independent learning presents learners with a more flexible learning context, it also presents new challenges in assessment in that the onus is placed upon the learners themselves to monitor and evaluate their own…
Descriptors: Independent Study, Evaluation Methods, Language Skills, Self Evaluation (Individuals)
Sanders, Robert – CALICO Journal, 2006
Language production of Spanish students using synchronous CMC (chat) during class time was compared with that of students meeting outside of class. The study included about 100 participants enrolled in 10 sections of a first-quarter Spanish course at a US university. Students in the control group spent 30 minutes of their weekly class time in…
Descriptors: Experimental Groups, Control Groups, Computer Mediated Communication, Synchronous Communication
Seto, Bethany; Meel, David E. – PRIMUS, 2006
This paper examines various issues surrounding the use of writing in the teaching and learning of mathematics using the voice and experiences of a licensed High School teacher instructing introductory college mathematics as a graduate teaching assistant. In general, we detail the journey taken by this teacher to explore the push for writing by…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, College Mathematics, Biographies, Teaching Assistants
Montgomery, Mike – Principal Leadership, 2005
Writing is a valuable learning tool in science classrooms. Written work provides an instructor with a tangible demonstration of learning and gives students the opportunity to connect their personal experiences to the content of the course. Most important, thoughtful writing assignments demand deep analysis of subject material and help students…
Descriptors: Scientific Literacy, Student Evaluation, Writing Across the Curriculum, Science Instruction
Sokuvitz, Sydel; Zhu, Yunxia; Gareis, Elisabeth; Bazzoni, Jana O'Keefe; Rolland, Deborah – Business Communication Quarterly, 2005
Two online collaborative assignments that connected students in courses at Unitec, New Zealand, and Baruch College, City University of New York, are the focus of this article. For the first assignment, small, blended groups used five different online techniques to explore topics being discussed in an intercultural communication course at each…
Descriptors: Business Communication, Intercultural Communication, Computer Mediated Communication, Team Training
Orrell, Janice – Teaching in Higher Education, 2006
Assessment theorists and academics alike espouse the importance of feedback on performance assessment tasks for supporting improvement and progress in student learning achievement. Despite these espoused ideals, students claim a lack of adequate, timely feedback and their teachers claim that students fail to heed the advice given. This paper…
Descriptors: Feedback, Performance Based Assessment, Teacher Behavior, Grading

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