NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing 3,271 to 3,285 of 7,038 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Schreiner, Steven – College Composition and Communication, 1997
Examines the work of Janet Emig, particularly "The Composing Processes of Twelfth Graders," as a means of gaining historical insight into the process movement in writing today. (TB)
Descriptors: Educational History, Higher Education, Process Approach (Writing), Writing (Composition)
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Young, Morris – Journal of Basic Writing, 1996
Explores ways basic writers theorize identities that locate them in the larger culture. States that as part of the composing process students need to locate their own notions of the writer in a dominant culture that has labeled them "at risk." Studies student texts for "theories" about writing and identity; moves to construct…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Cultural Context, High Risk Students, Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Wolfe, Joanna L.; Neuwirth, Christine M. – Journal of Business and Technical Communication, 2001
Describes the importance of annotation to reading and writing practices and reviews new technologies that complicate the ways annotation can be used to support and enhance traditional reading, writing, and collaboration processes. Emphasizes issues and methods that will be productive for enhancing theories of workplace and classroom communication…
Descriptors: Abstracting, Abstracts, Classroom Communication, Cooperation
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Schneider, Barbara – Journal of Business and Technical Communication, 2002
Proposes ethnomethodology as a theoretical approach for resolving the structure-agency binary and for treating the activities of writers in organizations as simultaneously embedded in and constitutive of organizational context. Illustrates the value of ethnomethodology with data from a study examining the social practices that surrounded the…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Ethnography, Higher Education, Organizational Communication
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Fox, Mem – Reading Online, 2001
Discusses insights the author has gained from various experiences of writing. Brings these insights all together in a way that may point writing curriculum in a new and totally unexpected direction. Contends that the goal of writing curriculum is to have children writing competently, correctly, and effectively. Explains how to make writing matter…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Environment, Elementary Secondary Education, Student Attitudes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Whitton, Natasha L. – Eureka Studies In Teaching Short Fiction, 2000
Considers how Bobbie Ann Mason's short story "Shiloh" contains a wealth of metaphoric imagery and has been analyzed through various lenses of the literary tradition, including that of the Grail quest. Suggests that it provides the necessary components for any unit concentrating on teaching the anatomy of the elements of the short story. Discusses…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, English Instruction, Higher Education, Instructional Innovation
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Broaddus, Karen; Ivey, Gay – Language Arts, 2002
Describes how students parallel the process of author Megan McDonald in conducting research and collecting information to provide ideas for the form and content of their writing. Notes that guiding students to record and organize information in a graphic format helps them to transfer those interesting details to new types of writing. (SG)
Descriptors: Grade 5, Information Literacy, Instructional Innovation, Intermediate Grades
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Kerper, Richard M. – Language Arts, 2002
Explores the creation of "An Extraordinary Life: The Story of a Monarch Butterfly." Selects this book because of the unprecedented decision to give the 1998 Orbis Pictus Award to both the author and the illustrator for a work in which text and illustration melded together. Develops an event model, revealing the creation of this…
Descriptors: Authors, Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Illustrations
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Chai, Constance – English Quarterly, 2002
Proposes a model which connects the acts of reading and writing in three cyclical components: the forming cycle, the coding cycle, and the reviewing cycle. Explains in each interlock of the cycles are the subprocesses generating, organizing, and editing. Notes that the sensor is centered where all three prime processes overlap, serving to…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Strategies, Models, Reading Processes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Rocklin, Edward – College English, 1991
Suggests the need to integrate drama into any future unified theory of the writing and reading process as symbolic action. Argues for the use of drama as an analogy for re-thinking pedagogy, because drama provides a mode of thinking that emphasizes the interplay of agent and structure. (RS)
Descriptors: College English, Drama, Higher Education, Reading Processes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Vallecorsa, Ada L.; And Others – Teaching Exceptional Children, 1991
This article describes a process-oriented writing program for use with learning-disabled students at all grade levels. Strategies for helping students at the planning stage, the drafting stage, and the evaluation and revision stage are offered. (DB)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Disabilities, Teaching Methods
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Moxley, Joseph M. – Research & Teaching in Developmental Education, 1985
Reports findings from interviews conducted with four inexperienced writing students and one experienced writer regarding their awareness of external and internal audiences guiding their writing. Most inexperienced writers perceived only external audiences (e.g., teacher-as-audience), although one inexperienced writer and the experienced writer…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, College Students, Higher Education, Interviews
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Wong, Bernice Y. L.; And Others – Learning Disability Quarterly, 1989
Twenty-one learning-disabled eighth and eleventh graders wrote essays and answered a questionnaire concerning metacognition. Subjects were comparable to normally achieving sixth graders in their essays' interestingness, clarity in communication of goals, word choice, paragraph structure, and metacognition about the writing process. (Author/JDD)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Comparative Analysis, Essays, Learning Disabilities
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Latta, B. Dawn – English Journal, 1991
Argues the relative merits of using in-process and retrospective journals, during and after the writing process, to empower students to explore and use their own ways of constructing knowledge to make connections as they write. (KEH)
Descriptors: Grade 10, Process Approach (Writing), Rhetorical Invention, Secondary Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Smith, Carl B. – Reading Teacher, 1991
Suggests that each type of literature presented to young readers serves two important functions: to develop a schema for that literary genre; and to encourage the application of thinking skills in a variety of literary engagements. Presents four related resources from the ERIC database. (MG)
Descriptors: Literary Genres, Literature, Reader Text Relationship, Reading Instruction
Pages: 1  |  ...  |  215  |  216  |  217  |  218  |  219  |  220  |  221  |  222  |  223  |  ...  |  470