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Kantrowitz, Judy L. – Counseling and Values, 2010
When, why, and how clinicians decide to write about clients are ethical concerns. There are risks and potential clinical ramifications as well as responsibilities for how these decisions are made. On the basis of 141 interviews with psychoanalysts who have published in 3 major national and international psychoanalytic journals, the author explores…
Descriptors: Interviews, Attitude Change, Ethics, Decision Making
Hellman, Caroline; Rowland, Amy – Physical Educator, 2008
During the spring semester of 2006 the Department of Physical Education (John Jay College of Criminal Justice) and a writing fellow, an English doctoral candidate (CUNY Graduate Center), began working together, with the goal of creating a new writing assignment for an integral course at the college. PED 103, Personal Physical Fitness and Dynamic…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Physical Education, Writing Across the Curriculum, Physical Fitness
Anderson, Diane Downer – Research in the Teaching of English, 2008
Research on persuasive writing by elementary children posits primarily a developmental perspective, claiming that elementary-age children can effectively argue through talk but not through writing. While this view is commonly held, this article presents counterevidence. Drawing on two cases of third and fourth grade children writing persuasive…
Descriptors: Childrens Writing, Persuasive Discourse, Grade 4, Elementary School Students
Stolarek, Elizabeth A. – 1991
Three studies examined the effectiveness of teaching an unfamiliar prose form using prose modeling (duplicating defining characteristics of a model text using different content). First, English department instructors at four universities were surveyed and of the 70 who responded, 76% stated that they did use modeling in their classrooms. In the…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Instructional Innovation
Donovan, Eileen – 1994
Writing instructors who would like to move beyond the collaboration provided by workshops and peer-response groups might consider asking groups of students to write a collage together. According to Peter Elbow, a collage "consists not of a single perfectly connected train of explicit thinking or narrative but rather of fragments: arranged how…
Descriptors: Collaborative Writing, Higher Education, Writing Attitudes, Writing Exercises
Caswell, Donald – 1990
The goal of persuasive writing is to move the reader to action or to get the reader to refrain from action, and most of the secrets of persuasion can work either way. To get readers to take action, a writer has to appeal to the emotions as much as possible. To get readers to refrain from action, a writer must appeal to the intellect. The secrets…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Persuasive Discourse, Writing Evaluation, Writing Improvement
Washington, Gene – 1991
If writing teachers want to use modality effectively, they first have to deal with three problems: identification of markers of modality in English; representation (the use of models for modality); and correlation (pedagogical usefulness, and writing strategies for students). Two models of modality address the problems which writing teachers…
Descriptors: Grammar, Higher Education, Models, Writing Assignments
Kesselman-Turkel, Judi; Peterson, Franklynn – 2003
This book explains how to work with ideas to hone them into words, providing techniques and exercises for brainstorming, choosing the right approach, working with an unknown or boring assigned topic, and selecting the best point of view. It presents 10 steps, noting related problems: (1) "Decide on Size" (no specific length is assigned);…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Outlining (Discourse), Plagiarism, Prewriting
Jalongo, Mary Renck – 2002
Comprehensive and logically sequenced, this guide seeks to helps educators publish on topics such as classroom experience, conference presentations, or research projects. Included in the guide are practical strategies, concrete examples, recommended resources, and advice from experts. The guide focuses on writing and how it is approached and…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Nonfiction, Professional Development, Writing for Publication
Hunt, Russell A. – 1999
"Inkshedding" grew out of a process of trying to make "freewriting" into something dialogically transactional. The idea was to give writing a social role in a classroom, and thus to create a situation in which the writing was read by real readers, to understand and respond to what was said rather than to evaluate and "help" with the writing. In…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Classroom Techniques, Free Writing, Higher Education
Campbell, Brian; Fulton, Lori – 2003
Notebooks have been used to document scientific discovery and are considered effective tools in the classroom. They make science experiences more meaningful and authentic for students as they observe, record, and reflect upon what they have learned. Notebook writing also offers a natural way to integrate science and language arts. This book…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Journal Writing, Science Education, Writing Across the Curriculum
Farrar, Julie M. – Writing Instructor, 1996
Examines the pitfalls of teaching and conceiving of writing in terms of content and form. Suggests that writing instructors and their students should think in rhetorical terms: how discourse responds to other discourse or to its audience, i.e., how it most effectively gets the job done. (TB)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Persuasive Discourse, Rhetorical Theory, Writing Instruction
Peer reviewedLopez-Gomez, Coral – Hispania, 1997
Discusses the usefulness to second language learning of an activity in which students assume a pen name and write letters under that name in the language studied in order to motivate their interest in the language and accelerate their mastery of it. (CK)
Descriptors: Journal Writing, Learning Strategies, Second Language Learning, Spanish
Peer reviewedChristoph, Julie Nelson – College English, 2002
Notes that educators must think about the possibilities for using autobiographical narrative ethically and effectively in academic writing and research, and they need to ask how the personal affects writing that is less personal. Considers how regardless of the stance toward the personal, no one can be an informed writer or reader without…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Feminism, Higher Education, Personal Narratives
Peer reviewedEwald, Helen Rothschild; Vann, Roberta – Journal of Business Communication, 2003
Examines direct mailing included in a nationally publicized court case. Articulates how the use of particular genre-based, rhetorical and linguistic strategies in these mailing construct reader identity. Argues that the documents use you-attitude to construct the identity of the reader as winner and to establish the reader's identity as the…
Descriptors: Business Communication, Communication Research, Ethics, Higher Education

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