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Peer reviewedSoliday, Mary – College Composition and Communication, 1996
Argues for a progressive version of mainstreaming remedial writers through a focus on one student who benefited from a two-semester course responsive to diverse language and cultural backgrounds. Discusses the political dimensions of mainstreaming which are an indelible aspect of writing program administration. (TB)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Cultural Differences, Higher Education, Mainstreaming
Peer reviewedLinnehan, Paul J. – English in Texas, 1994
Describes the relationship between reading and writing, particularly in the way that extensive reading can help writers improve their writing. Discusses four strategies a writing teacher used to revise a basic writing course. Shows how the strategies derive from current research. Describes briefly how the strategies are employed in designing and…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Course Descriptions, English Curriculum, English Instruction
Peer reviewedAbt-Perkins, Dawn – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1992
Discusses the ways in which a high school basic writing teacher abandoned the advice about her students offered by her colleagues and chose instead to develop a student-centered writing workshop. Demonstrates the potential a workshop model has for creating a community of authors in a high school basic writing class. (RS)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Classroom Environment, High Schools, Remedial Programs
Peer reviewedPence, Penny; And Others – Research & Teaching in Developmental Education, 1990
Describes five categories of software that can be useful in the basic writing classroom: computer-assisted instruction, computer-controlled instruction, artificial intelligence, computer-based rhetorical invention, and word processing. Evaluates each type of software in terms of their ability to fulfill the goals of basic writing instruction to…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Basic Writing, Classroom Techniques, Computer Assisted Instruction
Peer reviewedStygall, Gail – College Composition and Communication, 1994
Describes the difficulties of defining basic writers and basic writing. Argues that Michel Foucault's concept of the "author function" is applicable to academic and literary discourse and shows how it serves to organize curriculum and define the object of study in English departments. (HB)
Descriptors: Authors, Basic Writing, College English, Definitions
Peer reviewedKinder, Rose Marie – Journal of Basic Writing, 1991
Advocates the frequent use of journalistic texts for classroom discussions because unplanned material creates a supportive environment. Reports how two groups of students who had failed an upper-division writing exam and who were reluctant to discuss assigned readings, became engaged and careful readers when similar material was presented…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Basic Writing, Higher Education, Reader Response
Peer reviewedSchriner, Delores K.; Willen, Matthew – College Composition and Communication, 1991
Discusses the experiences in working with the basic writing curriculum presented in "Facts, Artifacts and Counterfacts: Theory and Methods for a Reading and Writing Course." Discusses reasons for selecting "Facts" as a model for the basic writing program and the rationale for making modifications that renders it more applicable…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development, Freshman Composition
Peer reviewedD'Agostino, Karen Nilson; Varone, Sandra D. – Computers and Composition, 1991
Describes a classroom research project that explores an important feature of the learning context of computer-integrated basic writing classes: verbal response to on-screen student text. Explains methods designed and used. Considers how teachers can work more effectively with basic writers in a computer classroom where writing practice and oral…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Classroom Research, Computer Uses in Education, Higher Education
Peer reviewedReigstad, Thomas J. – Research & Teaching in Developmental Education, 1987
Argues for teaching students to write leads that stress unusual story features and can be used as a peg to hang the rest of the story on. Recommends the use of student writing models, accounts by professional writers about lead writing, and instruction in the rhetorical strategy of contrast/dissonance. (PAA)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Postsecondary Education, Remedial Instruction, Sentences
Peer reviewedSirc, Geoffrey – Journal of Basic Writing, 1994
Presents "The Autobiography of Malcolm X" as an effective text for the basic writing classroom. Describes how this book affirms literacy skills and charts perceptual growth. Claims that this text is effective in helping students understand the passion and strength of character necessary for any writer's growth. (HB)
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Basic Skills, Basic Writing, English Instruction
Peer reviewedGrabill, Jeffrey T. – Journal of Basic Writing, 1998
Argues that the identity of basic writing (its status and position) is a function of larger institutional decision-making processes and therefore the focus of efforts to change basic writing should also engage these institutional processes. Focuses on how participating in technology design can be a wedge for engaging in decision making about the…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Change Strategies, Educational Change, Educational Technology
Peer reviewedBell, James H. – Journal of College Reading and Learning, 1999
Describes in detail a one-to-one writing conference between a graduate student tutor and a basic writer in a writing center. Raises questions of problem identification, the university context, learning disabilities, tutor training, professional development, and what constitutes good tutoring. (RS)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Case Studies, Higher Education, Learning Disabilities
Peer reviewedTroyka, Lynn Quitman – Journal of Basic Writing, 2000
Outlines four ways the basic writing enterprise has failed: by giving insufficient attention to public relations; by allowing itself to be co-opted by traditional academic politics; by not unraveling the confusion of legitimate differences of dialect with "bad grammar"; and by not taking a more critical and enterprising approach to research. (SR)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Dialects, Grammar, Higher Education
Peer reviewedMarinara, Martha – Journal of Basic Writing, 1997
Constructs narratives concerning working class students to highlight the difficulties of negotiating academic codes and the necessity for writing teachers to strive to provide the space for working class students to "speak differently." Finds the negotiation must flow in two directions: the academy cannot take over a text without being…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Basic Writing, College Students, Higher Education
Peer reviewedYbarra, Raul – Journal of Basic Writing, 2001
Presents an intensive case study using ethnographic techniques to understand how teaching affects nonmainstream students, particularly Latinos. Suggests that much of the problem is students feeling out of place and notes that the writing teacher's role is finding ways to get students to come to class and motivate them to participate. (SG)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Case Studies, Ethnography, Higher Education


