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Hogarty, Ken – English Journal, 1991
Describes a class activity designed to play up the blurred boundary between fiction and nonfiction. Notes that students filled out Internal Revenue Service tax forms for people who might exist and that other students created biographies and autobiographies from the fictitious tax forms. (RS)
Descriptors: Biographies, Class Activities, English Instruction, Fiction
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Wolff, Janice M. – College Composition and Communication, 1991
Reflects on a thematic section on "The Status of Women" taught in a freshmen writing class. Discusses the resistance of the author and students and the angered and impassioned writing that arises when texts challenge the ideologies of readers. (MG)
Descriptors: Feminism, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Reader Response
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Weber, Dean – English Journal, 1992
Defines technical writing, the importance of audience awareness, and the fog index. Analyzes examples of technical writing and tips on developing skills such as writing instructions and assembling a model. Offers assignments and projects as well as class activities. (PRA)
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Class Activities, Classroom Techniques, Secondary Education
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Belanger, Kelly; Greer, Jane – Journal of Business and Technical Communication, 1992
Describes a course that integrates individual and collaborative group assignments while requiring students to work through multiple drafting processes involving teacher and peer intervention. Outlines specific assignments. Addresses issues such as establishing collaborative groups, analyzing group dynamics and writing processes, and the role of…
Descriptors: Business Communication, Collaborative Writing, Course Descriptions, Group Dynamics
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Frisch, Adam J. – Bulletin of the Association for Business Communication, 1991
Discusses the problem of asking students to write for the teacher, an authoritative, superior reader. Asserts that a better approach is to ask the students to first address their papers to a small group, and second to choose a specific value system to characterize the attitudes and beliefs of the group selected. (PRA)
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Business Communication, Business Education, Higher Education
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Warlaumont, Hazel G. – Bulletin of the Association for Business Communication, 1991
Compares students' solutions to a business writing problem-solving assignment to their personal beliefs about government regulation of business. Finds that although most students do not favor government intervention, they turned to the government when finding solutions to business problems. Suggests that this paradox is a result of students'…
Descriptors: Business Communication, Business Education, Government Role, Higher Education
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Kryder, LeeAnne Giannone – Bulletin of the Association for Business Communication, 1991
Focuses on the collaborative writing done for a large report or proposal over a period of several weeks or months in a business writing course. Discusses short-term writing projects and nonwriting tasks for project administration, meeting management, student/instructor conference, project planning and time estimates, and oral presentations. (PRA)
Descriptors: Business Communication, Business Education, Collaborative Writing, Higher Education
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Dimmitt, Jean Pollard; Van Cleaf, David W. – Social Education, 1992
Discusses the use of writing assignments for teaching social studies. Suggests that alternatives to the standard research paper may be more advantageous to students by providing increased opportunity for creativity. Describes oral history projects, diaries, letters, advertisements, monologues, brief investigations, and position papers as suitable…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, History Instruction, Interdisciplinary Approach, Research Papers (Students)
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Carlson, Janet F. – Teaching of Psychology, 1992
Describes a series of writing assignments in which entry level graduate students in a personality theory class wrote four short papers interpreting the personality of a character from a children's story or comic strip. Explains that each paper utilized a different theoretical orientation: psychoanalytic, dispositional, phenomenological, and…
Descriptors: Characterization, Comics (Publications), Fairy Tales, Graduate Students
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Barry, Margaret; And Others – Reading Teacher, 1993
Discusses five classroom teaching methods: (1) creating audio-visual picture book presentations; (2) using written retellings of fables to teach dialogue; (3) writing letters; (4) planning a year-end "read-in"; and (5) turning story maps into game boards. (RS)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Folk Culture, Letters (Correspondence), Literature Appreciation
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Reisin, Gail – English Journal, 1993
Shows how one teacher used innovative methods in teaching William Shakespeare's "Macbeth." Outlines student assignments including text renderings, rewriting a scene from the play, and creating a multicultural scrapbook for the play. (HB)
Descriptors: Drama, Dramatics, English Curriculum, English Instruction
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Huddleston, Gregory H. – English Journal, 1993
Describes one teacher's methods for introducing to secondary English students the concepts of Classicism and Romanticism in relation to pictures of gardens, architecture, music, and literary works. Outlines how the unit leads to a writing assignment based on collected responses over time. (HB)
Descriptors: English Curriculum, English Instruction, Literature Appreciation, Romanticism
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Romano, Tom – English Journal, 1993
Discusses one high school senior's fictional rendition of her family's experiences of immigration and the American myth. Describes how stories such as this one can be moving and powerful, and thus constitute a sort of "fictional dream" into which readers enter and are thereby changed. (HB)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, English Curriculum, English Instruction, Family (Sociological Unit)
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Peterson, Linda H. – College Composition and Communication, 1991
Examines questions concerning the assignment of autobiographical essays. Discusses the links between gender and genre. Argues that writing teachers should reexamine their assumptions about "good" autobiographical writing and acknowledge the links between gender and genre. (MG)
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Essays, Higher Education, Literary Genres
Chapman, Loraine – Civic Perspective, 1988
Describes a research project conducted by twelfth grade students in American government classes. States that the project's objectives are to have students become aware of the approachability of legislators and to realize that input from informed citizens is central to the democratic process. (RDS)
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Democratic Values, Grade 12, High Schools
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